Also, look over the handout on rhetorical fallacies distributed on Thursday; you should look at those that have a dot next to them, especially the ad hominem argument, the argument from authority, the appeal to ignorance, the hasty generalization, the false dichotomy, scare tactics, the faulty analogy, and the straw man argument. (Keep in mind that the handout's definition of "straw man" is inadequate; consider this one from fallacyfiles.org: "Imagine a fight in which one of the combatants sets up a man of straw, attacks it, then proclaims victory. All the while, the real opponent stands by untouched....[In a straw man argument] the arguer is attempting to refute his opponent's position, and in the context required to do so, but instead attacks a position--the 'straw man'--not held by his opponent.")
If it is not cancelled, watch the presidential debate on Friday at 9:00. Bonus points will be given to those who identify rhetorical fallacies during the debate.
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