It is based on myths and fallacies which provide legitimacy for gross social inequalities. |
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I didn't discover the fallacies in those beliefs, but whoever did made some Great Discoveries. |
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Hence, it is necessary for us to enumerate the different fallacies often committed by an ignorant thinker, a deceiver and an inaccurate thinker. |
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Johnson's argument is based on some obvious fallacies, such as information requiring an intelligent author. |
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Now this could be an opportune time to have a look at our own railway lines and get a few facts or fallacies cleared up once and for all. |
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Much research has been done in the past few years into the history of Witchcraft and common beliefs proved to be fallacies. |
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He recommended that special attention be given to the refutation of these fallacies. |
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The fallacies of this critique have been elaborated around the Internet, but let's rehash a little. |
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What scientists frown upon is levelling arguments based on rank ignorance and logical fallacies. |
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However, we must correct these popular fallacies in order to properly address the ills that stem from intervention by big government. |
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There are two common fallacies that play an essential part in the uncritical acceptance of psychic readings. |
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The focus of my art is to target specific errors and idolatries of humanity, revealing their fallacies through scriptural references. |
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As a pointer on the fallacies of lazy thinking based on faith rather than facts, it makes a great read. |
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I can't summon the necessary faith to believe in magic if I suspect it's inconsistent nonsense, or a mess of superstitions based on fallacies. |
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The difference being that the missionaries were spreading good, while today's collectivists are pushing fallacies. |
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If people jump to conclusions, take things personally, or fall for other fallacies, they will act as though everything around them is dangerous. |
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One of the most deceptive fallacies in the book of logic is that what is true in the present will be true in the future. |
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He demonstrates logical flaws in the theory and points out its fallacies. |
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It's filled with unsupported assertions, deceptive qualifiers, logical fallacies and rhetorical tricks so cheap they would make a trial lawyer blush. |
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The notion that equity pre-funding financed by on-budget surpluses can increase capital accumulation buys into the fallacies that have driven policies of fiscal austerity. |
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The fallacies dependent on language are equivocation, amphiboly, combination of words, division of words, accent and form of expression. |
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He is an artist of logical fallacies and forced choices, turning the quantitative qualitative. |
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In so doing, they commit the logical fallacies of proof by assertion and circular reasoning. |
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If a person cannot see through the most common logical fallacies, he will unlikely be able to consistently make prudent decisions. |
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On the one hand, Husserl points out that if the laws of syllogistics were laws of thought, then we would never commit fallacies. |
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I think people need to understand one of the fallacies about the taser device. |
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I'm not quite sure why he felt the need to Latinise the names of his fallacies but I suspect it put more people off reading the article than it encouraged. |
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These are the facts to rebut just a few of the fallacies I read on a daily basis about our party. |
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Masood Aziz outlines six fallacies they perpetuate about the US engagement in Afghanistan. |
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Part 2 reviews the history of developing conceptions of fallacies as it is found from Aristotle to Copi. |
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As discussed earlier, information shared between pilots can convey both truths and fallacies. |
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As we shall see, there are yet other conceptions of what fallacies are, but the present inquiry focuses on the argument conception of fallacies. |
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One of the fallacies of foreign policy has been that we tend to negotiate with the leaders of certain countries who do not necessarily have the best interests of their people at heart. |
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The Commission is calling for a sharp break with past practices, mired as they are in fallacies about Aboriginal people and their rights, tarnished as they are with failed negotiations and broken promises. |
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There are, to be sure, a few books on the subject, and the larger encyclopedias have articles on logic describing the various fallacies and other intellectual tools. |
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Among Aristotle's nonverbal fallacies, what is known as the fallacy of accident, in the simplest cases, amounts to at least a confusion between different senses of verbs for being. |
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You don't have to take a formal logic course or memorize logical notation, as long as you understand the basic principles of logic and the logical fallacies. |
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They deploy false analogies and other logical fallacies. |
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Also: A useful chart of common logical fallacies. |
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His less strident material pits logical fallacies against his own life. |
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Because the rules of inference of deductive logic are definitory, there cannot exist a theory of deductive fallacies that is independent of the study of these rules. |
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Gardner turned to defending reason and science from an onslaught of fads, fallacies, charlatans and poseurs. |
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He has pointed out some fallacies that we are painfully aware of. |
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One of the other fallacies is that members opposite, as well as the Premier of Saskatchewan, suggest that Saskatchewan will get no equalization money next year because of changes made to the equalization formula. |
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Prevailing misconceptions regarding the proper utilization of foodstuffs including common food fads and fallacies, dietary supplements, weight control diets, etc. |
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I am particularly pleased to speak because I want to ensure I have the opportunity to dispel some of the half-truths and outright fallacies being propagated in debate, particularly today, by members of the opposition. |
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There are many fallacies when it comes to winter driving conditions. |
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We are accustomed to law spelled L-A-W, but anthropologists might spell it L-O-R-E, as in folklore: both are based on complex sets of truths and fallacies that characterize a given society. |
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You can see that if you get enough different categories, sooner or later you'll find one that's statistically different, and that's one of the fallacies of having multiple categories with relatively small populations. |
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Later in his life, Pound analyzed what he judged to be his own failings as a writer attributable to his adherence to ideological fallacies. |
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Yet the alleged fallacies in the proof continue to attract scholarly attention in journal articles and book chapters. |
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The fallacies and figures sections include basic examples of each including antithesis, anaphora, praeteritio, and prolepsis to name a few. |
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But this post-partisan dream, it turns out, rested on two fallacies. |
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One of those fallacies is that new material types will not be needed, but more applications will switch to higher glass transition temperatures. |
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This book is part of a growing literature calling for a reconsideration of behaviorism caused by shortcomings and fallacies of cognitivism. |
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Sumptuary laws are among the exploded fallacies which we have outgrown, and we smile at the unwisdom which could except to regulate private habits and manners by statute. |
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It is usual to say that Mill is committing a number of fallacies. |
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Most of their arguments were dismissable as obvious fallacies. |
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