单词 | Fallacy |
例句 | (1) It's a fallacy to suppose that wealth brings happiness. (2) He detected the fallacy of her argument. (3) The fallacy has been exposed in its naked absurdity. (4) It is a fallacy to say that the camera never lies. (5) It's an often repeated fallacy that homosexual men have more promiscuous lifestyles than heterosexuals. (6) It's a common fallacy that a neutered dog will become fat and lazy. (7) This is a common fallacy which has no basis in fact. (8) It's a fallacy that the affluent give relatively more to charity than the less prosperous. (9) Don't believe the fallacy that money brings happiness. (10) It was all just like a pathetic fallacy. (11) It is therefore either a tautology or a fallacy to state that lack of entrepreneurial talent is the reason for poor growth. (12) Wild at heart Another much-fostered fallacy is that farm animals are now quite different from their wild and free ancestors. (13) The basic fallacy in all variations of these theories is their crude mechanistic economic determinism. (14) The other fallacy is that when people reach 65 they stop becoming contributors to the economy. (15) It's a fallacy that all fat people are fat simply because they eat too much. (16) It is a fallacy to think that the more information an organisation has the better will be the decisions. (17) It also exposes the fallacy of thinking that every possible world might come into existence sooner or later. (18) This fallacy says that everything that can happen, will happen(), given enough time. (19) This fallacy has snared philosophers from Plato to Leibniz and beyond, and it still snares many major physicists. (20) It contains an inherent fallacy: you are expecting the silent majority to speak. (21) They are delighted that they have exploded such a fallacy. (22) He argues that the project of defamiliarisation in photography rested upon acceptance of the fallacy of the transparency of the photograph. (23) However, the assumption that productivity must be directly related to biomass or chlorophyll is a fallacy. (24) It was essentially a new attempt to revive the Burkeian fallacy of empire through freedom, obedience through liberty. (25) This use of data at two levels of analysis seeks to minimize the problem of ecological fallacy. (26) Moore says that those who try to identify good with some complex property are committing what he calls the naturalistic fallacy. (27) The fundamental reason for this is a fact of ego-psychology which the individualistic fallacy and the therapeutic tunnel-vision of modern psychotherapy obscures. (28) However, it is important immediately to dispose of one popular fallacy. (29) The error is in taking the polynomial to be a structural representation of the system, but the basic underlying fallacy remains. (30) The idea that a good night's sleep will cure everything is a complete fallacy. (1) They are delighted that they have exploded such a fallacy. (31) And this called the ad hominem fallacy. (32) He identifies a logical fallacy in the article. (33) On the logical fallacy , it is important ... (34) Keynesian theory suffers from a rather glaring logical fallacy. (35) Avoid the "sunk cost fallacy". (36) Your judgment has been clouded by the sunk-cost fallacy: you hoped to get a master's degree, great food and an Italian paramour. (37) He described the claim in alliterative fashion as a composite of fantasy, fallacy and fiction. (38) Of the youth puzzle but with rebel, straightforward fallacy, there also is bold passional picture in the book. (39) This fallacy is still the basis of many labor union practices. (40) The principal fallacy centers on the workplace and concept of equal pay for equal work . (41) You study the methods of salving patients who have the baby was born, murder, and pointed out the fallacy of the church you. (42) The argument that psychic powers come from the unused majority of the brain is based on the logical fallacy of the argument from ignorance. (43) Division of mankind into workingman and capitalists suffers from the fallacy of simplism. (44) Historians, especially those so blinded by their research interests that they have been accused of"tunnel method, "frequently fall victim to the"technicist fallacy. (45) Also note that a completely machine-readable description of a contract for a remote interface is a fallacy. (46) He wants a fallacy to expose, a blunder to pillory, requires a Little sense of victory, a roll of the drums, to call his powers into full exercise. (47) Also common in the natural sciences , the technicist fallacy mistakenly identifies the discipline as a whole with certain parts of its technical implementation. (47) try its best to collect and create good sentences. (48) The third part completes the discussion of representation issue in this novel by exploring the pathetic fallacy in the representation of the surrounding world. (49) Also common in the natural sciences, the technicist fallacy (n. ) mistakenly identifies the discipline as a whole with certain parts of its technical implementation. (50) There is a lot to be gained if we stay away from the either-or fallacy in the services area. (51) Like post hoc, slippery slope can be a tricky fallacy to identify, since sometimes a chain of events really can be predicted to follow from a certain action. (52) The relative price effect is a fallacy, or at least, too simplistic. (53) Tip : To avoid the post hoc fallacy, the arguer would need to give us some explanation of the process by which the tax increase is supposed to have produced higher crime rates. (54) Whether or not this is truly an example of the straw man fallacy, I found it refreshing to see a student applying logical reasoning learned in another of his courses to the problem at hand. (55) The specificity fallacy arbitrarily limits a conclusion to specific categories of ideas. (56) All the defects in Poppers methodology are based on its philosophical root of atomistic individualism, which has exposed all faults and fallacy of liberalism idea that is based on modern metaphysics. (57) Many wrong words, because very few typing, see so-and-so web sites to the activities of the force has some players fallacy to send this post. (58) Ignorance might also affect procrastination through what the social scientist Jon Elster calls "the planning fallacy." (59) I have written several articles that may be helpful for your understanding, including my "Introduction of Logical Fallacy" and " How to Evaluate the Web". (60) His blunders of interpretation are due to what has been described as the " pathetic fallacy ". (61) It's the logical fallacy of extending someone's argument to ridiculous proportions and then criticizing the result. And I do not appreciate it. (62) The old illustrator never let his pupils fall for the pathetic fallacy, that empty barrels are lonely. (63) It's the logical fallacy of extending someone's argument to ridiculous proportions and then criticizing the result. (64) If one that England squad had the integrity to offer an explanation or apology for their pathetic fallacy World Cup campaign in South Africa, I don't care about any of it. (65) In his view, Luddism was, indeed, a fallacy when productivity improvements were still on the relatively flat, or slowly rising, part of the exponential curve. (66) Third, it’s really important not to get caught up in the fallacy of misplaced concreteness. (67) Also common in the natural sciences, the technicist (n. ) fallacy mistakenly identifies the discipline as a whole with certain parts of its technical implementation. (68) This was the fallacy, exploded by Henry Hazlitt, that high wages promoted prosperity by providing workers with "enough to buy back the product." (69) Your major premise was based on a faulty assumption---Classic fallacy. (70) Now there is a half-truth in the "backed-up" demand fallacy, just as there was in the broken-window fallacy. (71) The "Europeans made the theory so it must be racist" nonsense is a idiotic logical fallacy. (72) Because of the usage of the straw man fallacy, Kulak is so worried about attacking things(), he does not take the time to show both sides. (73) Even though most of us recognize the fallacy of placing too great a value on appearance, our desire for physical beauty is so ingrained in us that we cannot disassociate ourselves from it. (74) A key fallacy in this thinking, Hazlitt explained, is that it ignores the incomes, the wealth, and the jobs that are "destroyed by the taxes imposed to pay for that spending." (75) Thepolitics may be intractable, but they are based on a fallacy. (76) The fallacy of the neoclassicals is their tenet that total employment, though hit by shocks, can be said always to be heading back to some normal level. (77) The fear that the country will become a hive of "jihadi training camps" after a withdrawal is based on a basic fallacy. (78) Our representative justly and forcefully refuted the other side's fallacy. (79) The third part elaborate the theory and the current significance of the interpenetration and in-terembracing of the truth and the fallacy. (80) This fallacy gets its name from the Latin phrase "post hoc, ergo propter hoc," which translates as "after this, therefore because of this." (81) I play a game with the advertisements I'm exposed to... I try to figure out what logical fallacy they're using! (82) You commit a fallacy of non sequitur when you site in support of a conclusion something that's true but irrelevant. (83) It exposes the fallacy of short-term industrial gain at long-term environmental expense. (84) He had written poems about his affair with Agnieszka,(http:///fallacy.html) but his way with pathetic fallacy meant that even Basia could read them without guessing their true provenance. (85) He wanted a fallacy to expose, a blunder to pillory, I may say required a little sense of victory, a roll of the drum, to call his powers into full exercise. (86) This is a clear example of the logical fallacy called " affirming the consequent". (87) So the fallacy of fast talking, and the list of fallacies are down there just for you amusement Okay here's a fallacy, well deductively valid argument and here's a fallacy that looks like it. (88) After coming up with this egregious fallacy, Bernoulli topped it by blithely assuming that every individual's marginal utility of money moves in the very same constant proportion, b. |
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