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Description and examples of 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.
The U.S. government’s actions in the War on Terrorism also provide good examples of the Begging the Question fallacy.
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.
Fallacies of Logical Structure: Begging the Question (Circular Argument) ... "Begging the question" is the use of a proposition as a premise in an argument intended to support that same proposition.
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.) ...
ad hominem fallacy, fallacy of begging the question, genetic fallacy: My reaction depends upon why the statement is being made (the context). ... Therefore, it commits the fallacy of Begging the Question. ...
Begging the Question is a fallacy in which the premises include the claim that the conclusion is true or (directly or indirectly) assume that the conclusion is true.
On this formulation, the very name "relativist fallacy" begs the question against anyone who earnestly (however mistakenly or not) holds that there are no "objective facts." So some more work has to ...
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