What are often presented in the form of arguments?
Ideas and Claims
It is a number of arguments may be biased on faulty reasoning or commonly.
Fallacies
Name the 3 Different Kinds of Fallacies.
Ad Hominem
Straw Man
Slippery Slop
What kind of fallacy is attacking the person making the argument, rather than the argument itself?
Ad Hominem
What kind of fallacy is arguing against an oversimplified of otherwise distorted version of your opponents argument?
Straw Man
What kind of fallacy is claiming that a single event will inevitably give rise to a chain of future events?
Slippery Slop
This fallacy is thinking that because something holds true of a group of things taken individually, it must hold true of the same things taken collectively, or as a group.
The fallacy of composition
This fallacy is thinking that because something holds true of a group of things taken collectively, it must also hold true of the things which compose that group as they are taken individually.
The fallacy of division
This fallacy is when an arguer tries to sidetrack his audience by raising an irrelevant issue, and then claims that the original issue has been effectively settled by the irrelevant diversion.
Red Herring
This refer to tendencies or influences which affect the view point of people.
Bias
Bias has 2 differences namely.
Fact and Opinion
This is generally established truths, easily verified, and do not easily change from one situation to another.
Fact
This are more subjective and may express certain views and beliefs.
Opinion
Name the 5 Most Common Bias.
Conformity Bias
Conservatism Bias
Frequency Illusion
Hindsight Bias
Information Bias
This most common bias is the propensity to match with others, even if conforming is objectively incorrect.
Conformity Bias
This most common bias is believing prior knowledge more than new information.
Conservatism Bias
This most common bias is seeing something you just learned or attuned to everywhere like when you purchase a car and you begin to see the same model everywhere.
Frequency Illusion
This most common bias is misattributing your ability to predict outcomes based on whether that outcome occurred or not.
Hindsight Bias
This most common bias is the propensity to collect information even when that information won’t impact action.
Information Bias
This bias is the tendency to search for, interpret, and remember information that confirms out beliefs.
Confirmation Bias
Name the 4 reasons determining truth.
Justified True Belief
Relativism
Consensus Theory
Pragmatic Theory
This reason determining truth is considering something to be true if it is justified.
Justified True Belief
This reason determining truth is an idea of no absolute truth because truth depends on context.
Relativism
This reason determining truth is somewhat sabot-sabot lang.
Consensus Theory
This reason determining truth is attributed to usefulness, as long is something useful it is true.