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Circular Reasoning – supporting a premise with the premise rather than a conclusion.
Circular reasoning is the practice of assuming something, in order to prove the very thing that you assumed. ... Circular reasoning is very useful because anything at all can be proved with it, ...
The 83rd Meeting of the Skeptics' Circle: You're all Expelled!
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.
The New York Times reported this morning that in two separate, secret legal opinions signed by the Attorney General, the ...
Agnostic asks whether biblical Christians commit circular reasoning: role of axioms, internal consistency and real world application...
In the fallacy of circular reasoning, which is often called begging the question, you assume to be true what you are supposed to be proving.
This was circular reasoning, perhaps even outright dishonesty. Through the circular reasoning Newton managed to justify mechanical corrections that were non-existent.
They continue about the circular track, in their respective initial directions, and meet a second time.
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