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Description and examples of Begging the Question fallacy.
The U.S. government’s actions in the War on Terrorism also provide good examples of the Begging the Question fallacy.
Describes and gives examples of the informal logical fallacy of begging the question. ... Douglas N. Walton, "The Essential Ingredients of the Fallacy of Begging the Question", in
Describes and gives examples of the informal logical fallacy of question-begging analogy.
In logic, begging the question has traditionally described a type of logical fallacy (also called petitio principii) in which the proposition to be proved is assumed implicitly or explicitly in one of the premises.
I would say yes, it is a begging the question fallacy because she is assuming what she is trying to prove.
Begging the question is a common, usually undetected, rhetorical fallacy. It leads to unsupported conclusions and painful places we just can't live with. What can we do when it happens?
Begging the Question (circular reasoning): an argument that goes around in circles, assuming that what has to be proved has already been proved.
Suppressed evidence is a fallacy of presumption and is closely related to begging the question.
It identifies the issue in the form of a question. ... It evaluates its soundness. (For the fallacies, we skip the standard form reconstruction but explain how the fallacy occurs in the example.) ...
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