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Test your basic knowledge |
SAT Essay Logical Fallacies
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
sat
,
english
,
writing-skills
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Reasoning by Debate: When a writer argues against a claim that nobody actually holds or is universally considered weak. Setting up a straw man diverts attention from the real issues.
Numbers
Circular Reasoning
Straw man
Evaluating Reasoning by Generalization
2. Cause and Effect: claim than an event with more than one cause has only one cause
Post hoc ergo propter hoc
Evaluating Reasoning by Comparison
Single cause
Statistic
3. Reasoning by Proof: A fallacy in which a speaker or writer seeks to persuade not by giving evidence but by appealing to the respect people have for a person or institution.
Slippery Slope
Anecdote
Appeal to Authority
Logos
4. Obscuring or denying the complexity of an issue
Oversimplification
Values
Division
Smoke screen
5. Prejudging an individual based on ideas one has about the group the individual belongs to
Evaluating Reasoning by Debate
Begging the question
Stereotyping
Evaluating Reasoning by Comparison
6. Is there a reasonable connection between the cause and the effect? Is that connection explained? Are there other possible causes that have not been considered?
Red Herring
Correlation as cause
Appeal to the golden mean
Evaluating Cause and Effect Reasoning
7. Appeal to the the pity - sympathy or 'misery' of the audience
Ad hominem
Smoke screen
Ad misericordia
Vagueness
8. Information gained from personal experience representing a general pattern
Equivocation
Red Herring
Anecdote
Fact
9. Information that can be objectively proven as true
Fact
Hasty generalization
Anecdote
Ad populum
10. Cause and Effect: Assuming that an incident that precedes another is the cause of the second incident
Single cause
Composition
Post hoc ergo propter hoc
Opinion
11. Reasoning in which a conclusion is reached by stating a general principle and then applying that principle to a specific case
Circular Reasoning
Post hoc ergo propter hoc
Deductive Reasoning
Appeal to Authority
12. Any diversion intended to distract attention from the main issue
False scenario
Evaluating Cause and Effect Reasoning
Evaluating Reasoning by Proof/Authority
Red Herring
13. How similar or how different are the cases being compared? How many point of comparison is the arguer using?
Composition
Fact
Evaluating Reasoning by Comparison
Evaluating Reasoning by Proof/Authority
14. Information the writer asserts as being the result of an event
Cause-effect relationships
Opinion
Circular Reasoning
Hasty generalization
15. The use by a speaker of coded language that appears to mean one thing to the general population but has a different (and negative) meaning for a targeted subgroup of the audience.
Inductive Reasoning
Straw man
Dog whistle
Slippery Slope
16. Reasoning by Debate: In an argument - this is an attack on the person rather than on the opponent's ideas. It comes from the Latin meaning 'against the man.'
Vagueness
Ad hominem
Circular Reasoning
Negative Proof
17. Generalization: drawing conclusions based on insufficient or unrepresentative evidence
Ad vericundium
Hasty generalization
Special pleading
Ethos
18. Analogy or comparison that is not logically consistent
Circular Reasoning
Equivocation
Evaluating Reasoning by Debate
False analogy
19. Does the evidence prove the point being argued? Is this authority an expert on this particular topic?
Irrelevant Proof
Red herring
False analogy
Evaluating Reasoning by Proof/Authority
20. Have all reasonable alternatives been considered/eliminated? Does this author attack the other views in a fair way?
Vagueness
Double standard
Evaluating Reasoning by Debate
Straw man
21. Introducing an irrelevant point to divert readers' attention from the main issue being discussed
Post hoc ergo propter hoc
Red herring
Circular Reasoning
Numbers
22. Everybody knows fallacy. Asserts that some idea is common knowledge - so it must be true.
Inductive Reasoning
Appeal to the golden mean
Prevalent Proof
Red herring
23. Two comparable issues or ideas are judged by different criteria
Double standard
Evaluating Reasoning by Debate
Composition
Logos
24. Reasoning by Proof: absence of evidence is not evidence; he didn't say that... so it must be false
Cause-effect relationships
Special pleading
Circular Reasoning
Negative Proof
25. Appeal based on the credibility of the author
Ad hominem
Ethos
Division
Values
26. Common knowledge or beliefs readers accept as true
False authority
Values
Pathos
Straw man
27. Statements that are intentionally vague so that the audience may supply its own interpretations
Post hoc ergo propter hoc
Vagueness
Hasty generalization
Fact
28. Fallacy that asserts that given two positions - there exists a compromise between them which must be correct.
False scenario
Evaluating Reasoning by Generalization
Pathos
Appeal to the golden mean
29. When a writer uses the same term in two different senses in an argument. i.e. People choose what laws they obey. The Law of Gravity is a law. I choose to disobey the law of gravity.
Ad populum
Cause-effect relationships
Hasty generalization
Equivocation
30. Writer encourages readers to accept a conclusion without any support
Evaluating Reasoning by Debate
Begging the question
Evaluating Reasoning by Proof/Authority
Red herring
31. 'To the people' appeal to the prejudices of the audience - or claiming that (or a majority) supports your opinion
Opinion
Begging the question
Single cause
Ad populum
32. 'Against the man' attacking the person or group to which you are opposed rather than addressing the issue
Evaluating Reasoning by Comparison
Ad hominem
Undistributed Middle
Deductive Reasoning
33. Generalization: Assumes that members of a group must have a characteristic because one or more of its members has that characteristic.
Ethos
Genetic Fallacy
Composition
Nonsequiter
34. Reasoning by Debate: A fallacy that forces listeners to choose between two alternatives when more than two alternatives exist
Evaluating Reasoning by Proof/Authority
Hasty generalization
Fact
Either -or
35. Condemning an argument because of where it began - how it began - or who began it
Evaluating Reasoning by Comparison
Genetic Fallacy
Straw man
Hasty generalization
36. Claiming that one step in the wrong direction will lead to another - potentially disastrous consequence
Ad hominem
False scenario
Genetic Fallacy
Slippery slope
37. Stating the only two interpretations of actions are alternatives - ignoring any compromise or moderate course
Either-or Reasoning
Equivocation
Evaluating Reasoning by Comparison
Fact
38. Reasoning by Proof: the evidence offered does not really support the claim. Non Sequitur (It does not follow)
Post hoc ergo propter hoc
Red herring
Slippery Slope
Irrelevant Proof
39. Generalization: Assumes that an individual must have a characteristic because the group to which he or she belongs supposedly has that characteristic
Either-or Reasoning
Ad populum
Division
Smoke screen
40. Appeal to reason
Begging the question
Prevalent Proof
Single cause
Logos
41. 'To the authority' appeal based on the authority of a source
Appeal to Authority
Ad vericundium
Logos
Smoke screen
42. Information based on personal interpretation of facts
Vagueness
Opinion
Ad misericordia
Ethos
43. Ambiguity or multiplicity of interpretations of a repeated word or phrase
Fact
Equivocation
Statistic
Genetic Fallacy
44. 'it does not follow' drawing a conclusion or making a transition that is not a logical result of the facts
Red herring
Either-or Reasoning
Nonsequiter
Evaluating Cause and Effect Reasoning
45. Citing an expert on one subject as expert on another
Ad misericordia
Hasty generalization
Genetic Fallacy
False authority
46. Cause and Effect: 'What if' fallacy. Argues that everything would be different if one variable was different. Example: 'If the Nazis had won WWII - we'd all be speaking German!'
Irrelevant Proof
False scenario
Genetic Fallacy
Correlation as cause
47. Concealing the author's true intent - belief - or attitude towards an issue
Ad hominem
Smoke screen
Double standard
Post hoc ergo propter hoc
48. A fallacy that assumes that taking a first step will lead to subsequent steps that cannot be prevented
Slippery Slope
Stereotyping
False scenario
Correlation as cause
49. False transitive property - you assume that just because two things share a characteristic - all of their characteristics are shared: - 'penguins are black and white - old tv shows are black and white - therefore penguins are old tv shows'
Ad hominem
Undistributed Middle
Evaluating Reasoning by Comparison
Ad populum
50. Cause and Effect: A fallacy that assumes that because two variables are correlated (happen at the same time) that one must have caused the other
Appeal to the golden mean
Evaluating Cause and Effect Reasoning
False scenario
Correlation as cause