Showing posts with label fallacies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fallacies. Show all posts

Thursday, December 17, 2009

WHY BAD?

The inspiration:

Saturday, December 12, 2009

I Approve This Dishonesty

What do you get when you take the intellectual dishonesty of politicians and combine it with the intellectually dishonesty of advertising? A work of distorted art:

Friday, December 11, 2009

After a Word from Our Sponsors...

Here are some links on advertising and reasoning.
Lies in News?

Monday, December 7, 2009

Homework #3

Homework #3 is due at the beginning of class on Monday, December 14th. Your assignment is to choose an ad (on TV or from a magazine or wherever) and evaluate it from a logic & reasoning perspective.
  • First, very briefly explain the argument that the ad offers to sell its product.
  • Then, list and explain the mistakes in reasoning that the ad commits.
  • Then, list and explain the psychological ploys the ad uses (what psychological impediments does the ad try to exploit?).
  • Attach (if it's from a newspaper) or briefly explain the ad.

Friday, November 27, 2009

Open-Minded

Here's an entertaining 10-minute video on open-mindedness, science, and paranormal beliefs.


I like the definition of open-mindedness offered by this video: it is being open to new evidence. This brings with it a willingness to change your mind... but only if new evidence warrants such a change.

Changing your mind has gotten a bum rap lately: flip-flopping can kill a political career. But willingness to change your mind is an important intellectual virtue that is valued by scientists.

Friday, November 13, 2009

Deodorants' Gender Norms

If you don't buy these products, you're being unnatural:



Thursday, November 12, 2009

The Conspiracy Bug

Here's that article on the 9/11 conspiracy physicist that we talked about in class. I've quoted an excerpt of the relevant section on the lone-wolf semi-expert (physicist) versus the overwhelming consensus of more relevant experts (structural engineers):
While there are a handful of Web sites that seek to debunk the claims of Mr. Jones and others in the movement, most mainstream scientists, in fact, have not seen fit to engage them.

"There's nothing to debunk," says Zdenek P. Bazant, a professor of civil and environmental engineering at Northwestern University and the author of the first peer-reviewed paper on the World Trade Center collapses.

"It's a non-issue," says Sivaraj Shyam-Sunder, a lead investigator for the National Institute of Standards and Technology's study of the collapses.

Ross B. Corotis, a professor of civil engineering at the University of Colorado at Boulder and a member of the editorial board at the journal Structural Safety, says that most engineers are pretty settled on what happened at the World Trade Center. "There's not really disagreement as to what happened for 99 percent of the details," he says.
And one more excerpt on reasons to be skeptical of conspiracy theories in general:
One of the most common intuitive problems people have with conspiracy theories is that they require positing such complicated webs of secret actions. If the twin towers fell in a carefully orchestrated demolition shortly after being hit by planes, who set the charges? Who did the planning? And how could hundreds, if not thousands of people complicit in the murder of their own countrymen keep quiet? Usually, Occam's razor intervenes.

Another common problem with conspiracy theories is that they tend to impute cartoonish motives to "them" — the elites who operate in the shadows. The end result often feels like a heavily plotted movie whose characters do not ring true.

Then there are other cognitive Do Not Enter signs: When history ceases to resemble a train of conflicts and ambiguities and becomes instead a series of disinformation campaigns, you sense that a basic self-correcting mechanism of thought has been disabled. A bridge is out, and paranoia yawns below.
There are a lot of graduate-educated young earth creationists.

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Penguin Digestion Experts? You Bet!

So you didn't believe me when I said that there are experts on the subject of penguin digestion? Oh, you did? Fine, well, I'll prove it to you, anyway. Here are some academic articles on the topic:
Of course, no list would be complete without the often-cited, groundbreaking 1985 Ornis Scandinavica article:
Perhaps my favorite, though, is the following:
If any of these articles are above your head (I think they're all above mine!), you might like this, uh, simpler video demonstration of penguin digestion.

Monday, November 9, 2009

An Expert for Every Cause

Looking for links on appealing to authority? This is your post! First, here's an interesting article on a great question: How are non-specialists supposed to figure out the truth about stuff that requires expertise?

Not all alleged experts are actual experts. Here's a method to tell which experts are phonies (this article was originally published in the Chronicle of Higher Education).

It's important to check whether the person making an appeal to authority really knows who the authority is. That's why we should beware of claims that begin with "Studies show..."

And here's a Saturday Night Live sketch in which Christopher Walken completely flunks the competence test.

Saturday, November 7, 2009

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Begging the Dinosaur

DOWN WITH DESCRIPTIVISTS IN THIS ONE PARTICULAR INSTANCEI couldn't resist giving you some stuff on begging the question. Here's my favorite video for Mims's logically delicious song "This is Why I'm Hot":


Mims: 'I'm saying nothing.'

Sunday, November 1, 2009

Let's Be Diplomatic: Straw Person

If I Only Had a Brain...

Here's some stuff on the straw man fallacy:
Also, speaking of red herrings, here's a cute cat picture:

Did. Not. See. That. Coming.

Wait, we weren't just speaking of red her--Oh. I see what you did there.

Clever.

Friday, October 23, 2009

Midterm Reminder

Just a reminder: The midterm will be held Wednesday, October 28th. We'll be reviewing for the midterm in class on Wednesday. It's worth 15% of your overall grade, and will cover everything we've done in class so far:
  • definitions of 'logic,' 'reasoning,' and 'argument'
  • evaluating arguments
  • types of arguments:
    -deductive (aim for certainty, are valid/invalid and sound/unsound)
    -inductive (generalizing from examples, depend on large, representative samples)
    -args about cause/effect
    -abductive (inferences to the best explanation)
  • the ten fallacies covered in class so far
Finally, here's a sock puppet displaying the fallacy of appealing to ignorance.

I don't want EVIDENCE; I want to believe what I want!

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Homework #2

Just a reminder that homework #2 is due at the beginning of class on Friday, October 23rd. The assignment is to determine the fallacies in the arguments of #1 (a through t) of exercise 5-3 on pages 150-151 of our textbook.

A bloody penguin?

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

That's an Ad Hominem, Jerk

You're a Towel.Here's some links on the ad hominem (personal attack) fallacy:
Get to studying, you ignorant sluts.

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Take My Wife, As Amphiboly

Here's some stand up from Henny Youngman, the violin-toting comedian who came up with "Take my wife... please!"

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Fallacies, Fallacies, Everywhere

Looking for links on fallacies and equivocation? This is your post! First, there's a nice series of short articles on a bunch of different fallacies, including many that aren't in our book.... but also an entry on equivocation.

Speaking of, my best friend the inter-net has some nice examples of the fallacy of equivocation. Here is one good one:
A feather is light.
What is light cannot be dark.
Therefore, a feather cannot be dark.
Steal Wool Over Their Eyes?

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Group Presentations

Here are the assigned groups for the group presentations on fallacies, along with your topics and the date of each presentation:
  1. Accent & Division (10/12): Alisha, Ryan
  2. Ad Hominem & Appeal to Force (10/14): Ashley, Kristina
  3. Appeal to Pity & Popular Appeal (10/16): Kyle, Sam
  4. Appeal to Ignorance & Hasty Generalization (10/19): Dan, Johnny, Matt
  5. Straw Man & Red Herring (10/26): Christopher, Dominick
  6. Begging the Question & Loaded Question (10/28): Jonathan, William
  7. Appeal to Authority & False Dilemma (10/30): Amy, Elaine
  8. Slippery Slope & The Naturalistic Fallacy (11/02): Kathi, Lola
IT IS AN EXCITING OPPORTUNITY IS ALL