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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 Doctorate
Pascal's Wager: philosophy and rational belief
Pascal's "wager" is a fundamental philosophical argument defending belief in God. Through logical analysis based on a punishment-reward premise, Pascal shows that believing in God is preferable to not believing.
Essay Doctorate
Shakespeare Othello (1) My Noble Father, I
This is a four page paper, in total, but it is divided into four individual parts. Each of the four parts takes a quote from Othello and the Tempest--two quotes from each of this play are used. For each quote, a one page explanation is offered. The explanation analyzes the quote in the context of the play, and tells how the quote reflects on the characters in the play or its themes.
Research Paper Doctorate
Slave Religion and Slavery: Raboteau vs. Elkins Compared
¶ … slavery in American history. Specifically it will discuss the books "Slave Religion: The invisible institution in the Antebellum South" by Albert J. Raboteau, and "Slavery: A problem in American institutional and…
Essay Undergraduate
British literature: major works and traditions
This essay focuses on an early portion of Jonathan Swift's essay A Modest Proposal. A close reading of the section reveals three of the main tactics used by the narrator to make his point, which are in turn the tactics used to perpetuate the power of the upper classes. First, the narrator feigns interest in the plight of the poor in order to ensnare the reader. Then, the narrator makes appeals to both science and social authority to back up his claims, but the language used reveals the arbitrary nature of these appeals. Ultimately, the language of the essay itself becomes an implicit argument against the ideological structures which perpetuate class divisions.
Research Paper Doctorate
Fallacy summary and application in critical reasoning
Slippery slope is a logical fallacy where one event is said to lead to another event, which in turn leads to another event, which in turn has significant consequences. For example, a person might argue that if one…
Paper Doctorate
Knowledge of other minds: Norman Malcolm's philosophical approach
This essay examines Norman Malcolm's criticism of the argument from analogy in regards to the existence of other minds. By tracking Malcolm's argument, one can see how the argument from analogy cannot justify a belief in other minds. Ultimately, Malcolm suggests that this question is irrelevant, because it depends on a faulty assumption regarding the centrality of internal experience.
Essay Doctorate
Logic Gay Marriage Gay Marriage Has Become
Gay marriage has become a prominent issue in American politics and society in recent years. DADT (Don't Ask Don't Tell), states legalizing gay marriage (and those who did not) and legal challenges brought by the LGBT…
Paper Undergraduate
For Writergrrl101 ONLY
This is a red herring, otherwise known as "ignoratio elenchi." The following paragraph has nothing to do with Nixon's having or having not committed deception.
Paper Doctorate
Vaccines and the Great Denial,
The relationship between childhood vaccinations and autism has been widely discussed by a number of proponents and adherents who choose to believe that the one does or does not impact the other. The documents reviewed in this assignment perceive there is a culture of denial regarding this matter. The reason for this culture is an innate distrust of science related to denial arguments, denial movements, and motivated reasoning.
Paper Undergraduate
Rousseau in the Social Contract,
This essay examines Rousseau's theory of the social contract, and particularly the idea of the general will. Rousseau's theory of the general will is problematic for many readers, because at first glance it appears counterintuitive and actually somewhat cruel. However, when considered in light of Rousseau's emphasis on debate and reason, it becomes clear that the general will, far from being restricting, actually serves to allow the individual the most freedom possible.