Q1. Logical fallacies abuse the power of ethos appeals:
Q2. Mister Smith believes the cause of the plane crash will never be found. "Amelia Earhart crashed, and no one ever discovered why that happened." This is an example of a:
- Straw Man.
- Non Sequitur.
- False analogy.
- Guilt by association.
Q3. Some groups are convinced that it was a bomb that brought down the World Trade Center. Joe Smith claims that polls taken minutes after smoke came out of the towers indicate that more than 75% of Americans believed it was a bomb. "With so many people in agreement, how could they be wrong?" he asked. This is an example of a:
- Flattery fallacy.
- Bandwagon fallacy.
- Red Herring fallacy.
- Either/or fallacy.
Q4. Either you have a Facebook account, or you're destined to be friendless for the rest of your life. This is an example of a
- Poisoning the Well fallacy.
- Bandwagon fallacy.
- Non Sequitur fallacy.
- Either/or fallacy.
Q5. A parent says to a child, "If you don't clean your room, you will not receive any gifts for your birthday." This is an example of a scare tactic fallacy
Q6. "You're a reasonable man. You'll have to vote for Candidate X. He's a reasonable man like you." This is an example of a stereotype fallacy:
Q7. A child says to his parents, "Sure I flunked math class, but I cleaned my room!" This is an example of a:
- Red Herring fallacy.
- Scare Tactic fallacy.
- Self-Contradiction fallacy.
- Hasty Generalization fallacy.
Q8. The following quote dates from the time of the Holocaust and can be found in Baynes, The Speeches of Adolf Hitler: "The influence of this intellectual Jewish class in Germany had everywhere a disintegrating effect" (p. 732). This is an example of:
- False Analogy.
- Scapegoating.
- Red Herring.
- Begging the question.
Q9. The following quote is from a 2005 speech given by futurist James Kunstler: "No combination of alternative fuel systems currently known will allow us to run what we are running, the way we're running it, or even a substantial fraction of it." This is an example of:
- Group think.
- False cause/effect.
- Hasty generalization.
- Flattery.
Q10. In his 2007 book, The Cult of the Amateur, Andrew Keen states, "[Wikipedia] is the blind leading the blind-infinite monkeys providing infinite information for infinite readers, perpetuating the cycle of misinformation and ignorance" (p. 4). This is an example of:
- Ad Hominem.
- Slippery Slope.
- Begging the Question.
- Non Sequitur.