By Dr. Richard Paul and Dr. Linda Elder
"Most people deeply believe in -- but are unaware of -- the following premises:
1. It's true if I believe it
2. It's true if we believe it
3. It's true if I want to believe it
4. It's true if it serves my vested interest to believe it"
From http://www.criticalthinking.org/
- Appeal to Authority
- Appeal to Experience
- Appeal to Fear
- Appeal to Popular Passions
- Appeal to Tradition or Faith ("the tried & true")
- Assume a Posture of Righteousness
- Attack the person (and not the argument)
- Beg the Question
- Call For Perfection (demand impossible conditions)
- Create a False Dilemma (the great either/or)
- Question Your Opponent's Conclusions
- Create Misgivings: Where There's Smoke, There's Fire
- Create A Straw Man
- Deny or Defend Your Inconsistencies
- Demonize His Side Sanitize Yours
- Evade Questions, Gracefully
- Flatter Your Audience
- Hedge What You Say
- Ignore the Evidence
- Ignore the Main Point
- Attack Evidence (that undermines your case)
- Insist Loudly on a Minor Point
- Make Much of Any Inconsistencies in Your Opponent's Position
- Make Your Opponent Look Ridiculous
- Oversimplify the Issue
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