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Logical Fallacies
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Logical fallacies are errors in reasoning that undermine the validity of an argument, and they appear as a subject across a wide range of disciplines, including rhetoric, philosophy, communication, composition, and political science. Students encounter this topic in courses focused on critical thinking, business communication, and persuasive writing, where the ability to identify flawed reasoning is treated as a foundational academic skill. What makes the subject particularly rich is that fallacies surface in nearly every domain of public life — political speeches, advertising, media coverage, and social debate — giving writers concrete, real-world material to analyze and evaluate.

The papers gathered here reflect a broad range of approaches. Several take a rhetorical analysis angle, examining specific speeches and texts — including Obama's acceptance speech and Frederick Douglass's address on the hypocrisy of American slavery — to locate and name specific reasoning errors. Others apply a critical thinking framework to media and advertising, identifying how fallacies function in persuasion aimed at mass audiences. A number of papers connect fallacious reasoning to contested social and economic issues such as same-sex marriage, climate change coverage, and gender and class, treating fallacies as tools that shape public opinion rather than purely academic abstractions.

A strong essay on logical fallacies needs a clearly bounded thesis — rather than cataloguing every error in a source, it should argue how a particular pattern of faulty reasoning affects the credibility or persuasive force of the text. Evidence drawn directly from the primary source, with precise identification of each fallacy, carries the most weight. The most common pitfall to avoid is labeling an argument a fallacy without explaining why the reasoning fails and what consequence that has for the overall conclusion.

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Research Paper Undergraduate
Labels a Method of Silencing
¶ … labels a method of silencing or intimidating journalists: "bankrupting reporters who refuse to comply with subpoenas and court orders." (Martin, A16). This is her thesis, which she introduces in the second paragraph…
Essay Doctorate
Analysis of opposing viewpoints in two articles
¶ … Gun Control" care deeply enough about the Second Amendment to write essays on the topic. However, the two essays are completely different not just in their rhetorical content but also in their rhetorical style.
Paper High School
Identifying logical fallacies in argumentative reasoning
Hasty Generalization: On the FOX news channel's "Follow the Money" with Eric Bolling (June 22, 2011), talking heads were discussing the article on Al Gore in the latest Rolling Stone Magazine.
Paper Undergraduate
Logical Fallacies Appeal to Authority:
Appeal to authority: Selling the Nike Free
Research Paper Doctorate
Ethics and Logical Fallacies in Officer Green's Dilemma
Fallacy 1: Circular Definition (The definition includes the term being defined as a part of the definition, it is assumed because something is a rule it must be obeyed without saying why)
Essay Doctorate
The relationship between worldviews and critical thinking in university learning
¶ … university education. Critical thinking requires that the thinker consider all elements of an idea, concept or statement. There is a wide range of such elements, including the motives of the communicator, the…
Paper Doctorate
Build a Logical Argument by Clarifying Facts
¶ … build a logical argument by clarifying facts and speaking to a particular audience; and the conclusions must be strong and communicated well so that the intended audience can logically say, "I understand and agree…
Paper Masters
Logical Fallacies Mere Assertion Mere
This paper defines a number of common logical fallacies and provides examples demonstrating their use and their fallacious nature. The list includes, but is not limited to, fallacies of circular reasoning, ad hominem, and the slippery slope. Identifying logical fallacies for what they are is crucial for developing a critical perspective on the world.
Paper Undergraduate
Social Work Exercise the Imaginary Recording Helped
This is a seven page paper in which several different exercises related to social work are answered and expanded upon. The answers are creative and thoughtful. The questions are related to everything from cultural competence to good active listening skills to body language. The point of the exercise is to help the person become more prepared and self-aware when it comes to being a professional.
Paper Undergraduate
Advertising: Rhetorical Analysis the Met
The Met Life Insurance Company advertisement makes use of all three Aristotelian appeals to Ethos, Pathos, and Logos. The appeals to Ethos and to Logos are likely stronger than the appeal to Pathos, but only by virtue…