Showing all 916 entries
Bias or fallacy name | Also known as | Description | Reference | Added | Updated | ID |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
wise up | they're all liars, third person effect, wise up | A phenomenon in which people opt to remain in ignorance rather than listening to "mainstream media, the president, the medical establishment, professionals, pforessors, doctors, the academic elite, or other authorities or information sources, even about urgent subjects" and instead of becoming educated and participatory on a subject, thus laeding such uninformed people to believe that others are more influenced by mass media in comparsion with themselves. Example of: deliberate ignorance. See also: simpleton's fallacy, trust your gut. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 639_lf |
third person effect | they're all liars, third person effect, wise up | A phenomenon in which people opt to remain in ignorance rather than listening to "mainstream media, the president, the medical establishment, professionals, pforessors, doctors, the academic elite, or other authorities or information sources, even about urgent subjects" and instead of becoming educated and participatory on a subject, thus laeding such uninformed people to believe that others are more influenced by mass media in comparsion with themselves. Example of: deliberate ignorance. See also: simpleton's fallacy, trust your gut. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 654_lf |
they're all liars | they're all liars, third person effect, wise up | A phenomenon in which people opt to remain in ignorance rather than listening to "mainstream media, the president, the medical establishment, professionals, pforessors, doctors, the academic elite, or other authorities or information sources, even about urgent subjects" and instead of becoming educated and participatory on a subject, thus laeding such uninformed people to believe that others are more influenced by mass media in comparsion with themselves. Example of: deliberate ignorance. See also: simpleton's fallacy, trust your gut. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 880_lf |
plus ca change plus c'est la meme chose | the more things change the more they stay the same | An incorrect assertion that there "is not and will never be any real novelty in this world". Or, literally, "the more things change, the more they stay the same". A "corruption of the argument from logos". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 829_lf |
thousand flowers fallacy | take names and kick butt, thousand flowers fallacy | A phenomenon of deceptively allowing, encouraging, or demanding free and open brainstorming or discussion, which is only temporary and for the purpose of identifying and then punishing the opposition. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 655_lf |
take names and kick butt | take names and kick butt, thousand flowers fallacy | A phenomenon of deceptively allowing, encouraging, or demanding free and open brainstorming or discussion, which is only temporary and for the purpose of identifying and then punishing the opposition. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 870_lf |
throwing good money after bad | sunk cost fallacy, throwing good money after bad | Claiming that new investment is needed or else the prior investment would be lost, while ignoring the probability that additional investment will not result in actual gains, either. See also: argument from inertia. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 656_lf |
straw man argument | straw figure, straw person, straw man, straw man argument, strawman | The setting up and knocking down or reduction to absurdity of a false, weak, extreme, or ridiculous version of an opponent's argument, while ignoring the actual components of the actual argument that the opponent puts forth. A subtype of red herring. A component fallacy. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-28 | 015_lf |
straw man | straw figure, straw person, straw man, straw man argument, strawman | The setting up and knocking down or reduction to absurdity of a false, weak, extreme, or ridiculous version of an opponent's argument, while ignoring the actual components of the actual argument that the opponent puts forth. A subtype of red herring. A component fallacy. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 646_lf |
strawman | straw figure, straw person, straw man, straw man argument, strawman | The setting up and knocking down or reduction to absurdity of a false, weak, extreme, or ridiculous version of an opponent's argument, while ignoring the actual components of the actual argument that the opponent puts forth. A subtype of red herring. A component fallacy. | [1], [2], [3 | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 828_lf |
straw figure | straw figure, straw person, straw man, straw man argument, strawman | The setting up and knocking down or reduction to absurdity of a false, weak, extreme, or ridiculous version of an opponent's argument, while ignoring the actual components of the actual argument that the opponent puts forth. A subtype of red herring. A component fallacy. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 867_lf |
straw person | straw figure, straw person, straw man, straw man argument, strawman | The setting up and knocking down or reduction to absurdity of a false, weak, extreme, or ridiculous version of an opponent's argument, while ignoring the actual components of the actual argument that the opponent puts forth. A subtype of red herring. A component fallacy. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 868_lf |
stereotype bias | stereotype bias, stereotypical bias | A phenomenon in which memory is "distorted towards stereotypes (e.g., racial or gender)" | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 328_cb |
stereotypical bias | stereotype bias, stereotypical bias | A phenomenon in which memory is "distorted towards stereotypes (e.g., racial or gender)" | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 329_cb |
self deception | self deception, self fooling, whistling by the graveyard | The deliberate and knowing delusion of oneself "in order to achieve a goal, or perhaps simply to suppress anxiety and maintain one's energy level, enthusiasm, morale, peace of mind or sanity in moments of adversity." | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 627_lf |
whistling by the graveyard | self deception, self fooling, whistling by the graveyard | The deliberate and knowing delusion of oneself "in order to achieve a goal, or perhaps simply to suppress anxiety and maintain one's energy level, enthusiasm, morale, peace of mind or sanity in moments of adversity." | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 671_lf |
self fooling | self deception, self fooling, whistling by the graveyard | The deliberate and knowing delusion of oneself "in order to achieve a goal, or perhaps simply to suppress anxiety and maintain one's energy level, enthusiasm, morale, peace of mind or sanity in moments of adversity." | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 712_lf | |
self debasement | self debasement, self deprecation | A secenario in which false humility or genuine low self-esteem results in one's deliberately putting oneself down, "most often in hopes of attracting denials, gratifying compliments, and praise". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 626_lf |
self deprecation | self debasement, self deprecation | A secenario in which false humility or genuine low self-esteem results in one's deliberately putting oneself down, "most often in hopes of attracting denials, gratifying compliments, and praise". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 628_lf |
selection bias | selection bias, selection effect | The result when "the members of a statistical sample are not chosen completely at random", and as a result, the sample is "not representative of the population". An example of: availability heuristic. | [6], [20] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-07 | 311_cb |
selection effect | selection bias, selection effect | The result when "the members of a statistical sample are not chosen completely at random", and as a result, the sample is "not representative of the population". An example of: availability heuristic. | [6], [20] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-07 | 469_cb |
scripted message | scripted message, talking points | The strict limitation of public statements on a topic to ones that have been carefully prepared and are often "exaggerated or empty phrases developed to achieve maximum acceptance or maximum desired reaction from a target audience". Opposite of: venting. See also: big lie technique, dog whistle politics, political correctness. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 624_lf |
talking points | scripted message, talking points | The strict limitation of public statements on a topic to ones that have been carefully prepared and are often "exaggerated or empty phrases developed to achieve maximum acceptance or maximum desired reaction from a target audience". Opposite of: venting. See also: big lie technique, dog whistle politics, political correctness. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 650_lf |
scope insensitivity | scope neglect, scope insensitivity | A tendency to "be insensitive to the size of a problem when evaluating it". | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 291_cb | |
scope neglect | scope neglect, scope insensitivity | A tendency to "be insensitive to the size of a problem when evaluating it". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 310_cb |
safe place | safe place, safe space | The disallowance to "refute, challenge or even discuss another's beliefs" due to concerns over the discomfort or trigging effect on the emotionally fragile. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 617_lf |
safe space | safe place, safe space | The disallowance to "refute, challenge or even discuss another's beliefs" due to concerns over the discomfort or trigging effect on the emotionally fragile. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 618_lf |
refinement | refinement, real feelings | A claim that "certain classes of living beings...in general are deemed incapable of experiencing...[certain feelings] like we do, or of having any real feelings at all". Opposite of: playing on emotion. See also: apathetic fallacy, burnout, compassion fatigue, cynicism. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 613_lf |
real feelings | refinement, real feelings | A claim that "certain classes of living beings...in general are deemed incapable of experiencing...[certain feelings] like we do, or of having any real feelings at all". Opposite of: playing on emotion. See also: apathetic fallacy, burnout, compassion fatigue, cynicism. | [3] | 2024-08-28 | 2024-08-28 | 077_lf |
ad Hitleram | reductio ad Hitlerum | An example of ad hominem or guilt by association that invokes a specific extreme persona from history. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-13 | 696_lf |
prosopology | prosopology, prosopography, reciting the litany, tell me what were their names, reading the roll of martyrs | The use of a long list of names (often unknown to the audience) to underline the gravity of an event, since proper names "can have near-mystical persuasive power". A "fallacy of pathos and ethos". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 610_lf |
prosopography | prosopology, prosopography, reciting the litany, tell me what were their names, reading the roll of martyrs | The use of a long list of names (often unknown to the reader) to underline the gravity of an event, since proper names "can have near-mystical persuasive power". A "fallacy of pathos and ethos". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 839_lf |
reading the roll of martyrs | prosopology, prosopography, reciting the litany, tell me what were their names, reading the roll of martyrs | The use of a long list of names (often unknown to the audience) to underline the gravity of an event, since proper names "can have near-mystical persuasive power". A "fallacy of pathos and ethos". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 846_lf |
reciting the litany | prosopology, prosopography, reciting the litany, tell me what were their names, reading the roll of martyrs | The use of a long list of names (often unknown to the audience) to underline the gravity of an event, since proper names "can have near-mystical persuasive power". A "fallacy of pathos and ethos". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 847_lf |
tell me what were their names | prosopology, prosopography, reciting the litany, tell me what were their names, reading the roll of martyrs | The use of a long list of names (often unknown to the audience) to underline the gravity of an event, since proper names "can have near-mystical persuasive power". A "fallacy of pathos and ethos". | [3] | 2024-08-28 | 368_lf | |
nothing new under the sun | plus ca change plus c'est la meme chose, nothing new under the sun, seen it all before, surprise surprise, uniformitarianism | An incorrect assertion that there "is not and will never be any real novelty in this world". Or, literally, "the more things change, the more they stay the same". A "corruption of the argument from logos". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 585_lf |
seen it all before | plus ca change plus c'est la meme chose, nothing new under the sun, seen it all before, surprise surprise, uniformitarianism | An incorrect assertion that there "is not and will never be any real novelty in this world". Or, literally, "the more things change, the more they stay the same". A "corruption of the argument from logos". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 852_lf |
surprise surprise | plus ca change plus c'est la meme chose, nothing new under the sun, seen it all before, surprise surprise, uniformitarianism | An incorrect assertion that there "is not and will never be any real novelty in this world". Or, literally, "the more things change, the more they stay the same". A "corruption of the argument from logos". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 869_lf |
uniformitarianism | plus ca change plus c'est la meme chose, nothing new under the sun, seen it all before, surprise surprise, uniformitarianism | An incorrect assertion that there "is not and will never be any real novelty in this world". Or, literally, "the more things change, the more they stay the same". A "corruption of the argument from logos". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 894_lf |
we have to send a message | placebo effect, political theater, security theater, we have to do something, we have to send a message | The position that when there is a problem or disconcert, then doing anything is beter than doing nothing, even if that action might seem illogical. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 658_lf |
we have to do something | placebo effect, political theater, security theater, we have to do something, we have to send a message | The position that when there is a problem or disconcert, then doing anything is beter than doing nothing, even if that action might seem illogical. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 669_lf |
placebo effect | placebo effect, political theater, security theater, we have to do something, we have to send a message | The position that when there is a problem or disconcert, then doing anything is beter than doing nothing, even if that action might seem illogical. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 827_lf |
political theater | placebo effect, political theater, security theater, we have to do something, we have to send a message | The position that when there is a problem or disconcert, then doing anything is beter than doing nothing, even if that action might seem illogical. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 830_lf |
security theater | placebo effect, political theater, security theater, we have to do something, we have to send a message | The position that when there is a problem or disconcert, then doing anything is beter than doing nothing, even if that action might seem illogical. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 851_lf |
reductionism | oversimplifying, sloganeering, reductionism | Deceipt through "simple answers or bumper-sticker slogans in response to complex questions". See also: dog-whistle politics, plain truth fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 612_lf |
oversimplifying | oversimplifying, sloganeering, reductionism | Deceipt through "simple answers or bumper-sticker slogans in response to complex questions". See also: dog-whistle politics, plain truth fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 822_lf |
sloganeering | oversimplifying, sloganeering, reductionism | Deceipt through "simple answers or bumper-sticker slogans in response to complex questions". See also: dog-whistle politics, plain truth fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 860_lf |
overgeneralization | overgeneralization, totus pro partes, mereological fallacy | Applying an agreed-upon generalization to "all particular cases". A "fallacy of logos". Literally, "totus pro partes" means "whole for parts", and refers to extrapolating from one or two example cases to a claim about all cases. The term "mereological" refers to the study of the relationship between parts and a wholes.) See also: hasty generalization, pars pro toto fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 592_lf |
mereological fallacy | overgeneralization, totus pro partes, mereological fallacy | Applying an agreed-upon generalization to "all particular cases". A "fallacy of logos". Literally, "totus pro partes" means "whole for parts", and refers to extrapolating from one or two example cases to a claim about all cases. The term "mereological" refers to the study of the relationship between parts and a wholes.) See also: hasty generalization, pars pro toto fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 799_lf |
totus pro partes fallacy | overgeneralization, totus pro partes, mereological fallacy | Applying an agreed-upon generalization to "all particular cases". A "fallacy of logos". Literally, "totus pro partes" means "whole for parts", and refers to extrapolating from a claim about a whole to a claim about all components. The term "mereological" refers to the study of the relationship between parts and a wholes.) See also: hasty generalization, pars pro toto fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 885_lf |
stereotyping | othering, otherizing, prejudice, racism, speakee fallacy, stereotyping, they're not like us, xenophobia, you speakee da english | As a cognitive bias, a pheneomenon of "expecting a member of a group to have certain characteristics without having actual information about that individual". Example of: false priors. As a logical fallacy, an argument in which facts are arbitrarily discarded due to a claim that another group of people are different from the in-group. A "bady corrupted...argument from ethos". A form of: ad hominem argument, argumentum ad hominem, argument toward the man, attacking the person, personal attack, poisoning the well. See also: dehumanised perception, dehumanization. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-28 | 330_cb_lf |
othering | othering, otherizing, prejudice, racism, speakee fallacy, stereotyping, they're not like us, xenophobia, you speakee da english | An argument in which facts are arbitrarily discarded due to a claim that another group of people are different from the in-group. A "bady corrupted...argument from ethos". A form of: ad hominem argument, argumentum ad hominem, argument toward the man, attacking the person, personal attack, poisoning the well. See also: dehumanised perception, dehumanization. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 590_lf |
speakee fallacy | othering, otherizing, prejudice, racism, speakee fallacy, stereotyping, they're not like us, xenophobia, you speakee da english | An argument in which facts are arbitrarily discarded due to a claim that another group of people are different from the in-group. A "bady corrupted...argument from ethos". A form of: ad hominem argument, argumentum ad hominem, argument toward the man, attacking the person, personal attack, poisoning the well. See also: dehumanised perception, dehumanization. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 640_lf |
you speakee da english | othering, otherizing, prejudice, racism, speakee fallacy, stereotyping, they're not like us, xenophobia, you speakee da english | An argument in which facts are arbitrarily discarded due to a claim that another group of people are different from the in-group. A "bady corrupted...argument from ethos". A form of: ad hominem argument, argumentum ad hominem, argument toward the man, attacking the person, personal attack, poisoning the well. See also: dehumanised perception, dehumanization. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 677_lf |
otherizing | othering, otherizing, prejudice, racism, speakee fallacy, stereotyping, they're not like us, xenophobia, you speakee da english | An argument in which facts are arbitrarily discarded due to a claim that another group of people are different from the in-group. A "bady corrupted...argument from ethos". A form of: ad hominem argument, argumentum ad hominem, argument toward the man, attacking the person, personal attack, poisoning the well. See also: dehumanised perception, dehumanization. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 821_lf |
prejudice | othering, otherizing, prejudice, racism, speakee fallacy, stereotyping, they're not like us, xenophobia, you speakee da english | An argument in which facts are arbitrarily discarded due to a claim that another group of people are different from the in-group. A "bady corrupted...argument from ethos". A form of: ad hominem argument, argumentum ad hominem, argument toward the man, attacking the person, personal attack, poisoning the well. See also: dehumanised perception, dehumanization. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 836_lf |
racism | othering, otherizing, prejudice, racism, speakee fallacy, stereotyping, they're not like us, xenophobia, you speakee da english | An argument in which facts are arbitrarily discarded due to a claim that another group of people are different from the in-group. A "bady corrupted...argument from ethos". A form of: ad hominem argument, argumentum ad hominem, argument toward the man, attacking the person, personal attack, poisoning the well. See also: dehumanised perception, dehumanization. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 842_lf |
they're not like us | othering, otherizing, prejudice, racism, speakee fallacy, stereotyping, they're not like us, xenophobia, you speakee da english | An argument in which facts are arbitrarily discarded due to a claim that another group of people are different from the in-group. A "bady corrupted...argument from ethos". A form of: ad hominem argument, argumentum ad hominem, argument toward the man, attacking the person, personal attack, poisoning the well. See also: dehumanised perception, dehumanization. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 882_lf |
xenophobia | othering, otherizing, prejudice, racism, speakee fallacy, stereotyping, they're not like us, xenophobia, you speakee da english | An argument in which facts are arbitrarily discarded due to a claim that another group of people are different from the in-group. A "bady corrupted...argument from ethos". A form of: ad hominem argument, argumentum ad hominem, argument toward the man, attacking the person, personal attack, poisoning the well. See also: dehumanised perception, dehumanization. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 904_lf |
olfactory rhetoric | olfactory rhetoric, the nose knows | The marginalization of opponents based on false allegations of odor, poor hygeine, imagined diseases, or dirtiness. A "fallacy of pathos". See also: othering. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 588_lf |
the nose knows | olfactory rhetoric, the nose knows | olfactory rhetoric, the nose knows | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 876_lf |
obscurantism | obscurantism, obscurationism, willful ignorance | The argument that there are some things that humans, as mere mortals, either simply are not meant to know, or must never seek to know. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-26 | 587_lf |
obscurationism | obscurantism, obscurationism, willful ignorance | The argument that there are some things that humans, as mere mortals, either simply are not meant to know, or must never seek to know. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-26 | 818_lf |
willful ignorance | obscurantism, obscurationism, willful ignorance | The argument that there are some things that humans, as mere mortals, either simply are not meant to know, or must never seek to know. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-26 | 902_lf |
pout | noncooperation, nonviolent civil disobedience, pout, silent treatment | The arbitrary rejection of dialogue "before it is concluded". A from of: argumentum ad baculum. See also: no discussion, non-recognition. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 608_lf |
noncooperation | noncooperation, nonviolent civil disobedience, pout, silent treatment | The arbitrary rejection of dialogue "before it is concluded". A from of: argumentum ad baculum. See also: no discussion, non-recognition. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 812_lf |
nonviolent civil disobedience | noncooperation, nonviolent civil disobedience, pout, silent treatment | The arbitrary rejection of dialogue "before it is concluded". A from of: argumentum ad baculum. See also: no discussion, non-recognition. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 815_lf |
silent treatment | noncooperation, nonviolent civil disobedience, pout, silent treatment | The arbitrary rejection of dialogue "before it is concluded". A from of: argumentum ad baculum. See also: no discussion, non-recognition. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 856_lf |
non causa pro causa | non causa pro causa, not the cause for the cause | A "catch-all...for mistaking a false cause of an event for the real cause". Example of: false cause, false cause and effect. See also: coincidental correlation, correlation implies causation, cum hoc ergo propter hoc, after this therefore because of this, post hoc argument, post hoc propter hoc, post hoc ergo propter hoc. | [1], [2], [4] | 2024-08-26 | 2024-08-26 | 240_lf |
not the cause for the cause | non causa pro causa, not the cause for the cause | A "catch-all...for mistaking a false cause of an event for the real cause". Example of: false cause, false cause and effect. See also: coincidental correlation, correlation implies causation, cum hoc ergo propter hoc, after this therefore because of this, post hoc argument, post hoc propter hoc, post hoc ergo propter hoc. | [1], [2], [4] | 2024-08-26 | 2024-08-28 | 795_lf |
negativity bias | negativity effect, negativity effect | A tendency in which some people "have a greater recall of unpleasant memories compared with positive memories". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 255_cb |
negativity effect | negativity effect, negativity effect | A tendency in which some people "have a greater recall of unpleasant memories compared with positive memories". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 256_cb |
transfer | name dropping, transfer | The false association of "a famous or respected person, place or thing with an unrelated thesis or standpoint". A "corrupt argument form ethos". See also: star power. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-27 | 484_lf |
name dropping | name dropping, transfer | The false association of "a famous or respected person, place or thing with an unrelated thesis or standpoint". A "corrupt argument form ethos". See also: star power. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 575_lf |
motte and bailey fallacy | motte and bailey doctrine, motte and bailey fallacy | A fallacy of conflating two similar positions, one easier to defend and one much more controversial and harder to defend, in which the arguer "advances the controversial position, but when challenged, insists that only the more modest position is being advanced", then claims that the more controversial position has not been refuted. Ain informal fallacy. | [5] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-07 | 095_lf |
motte and bailey doctrine | motte and bailey doctrine, motte and bailey fallacy | A fallacy of conflating two similar positions, one easier to defend and one much more controversial and harder to defend, in which the arguer "advances the controversial position, but when challenged, insists that only the more modest position is being advanced", then claims that the more controversial position has not been refuted. Ain informal fallacy. | [5] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-06 | 371_lf |
moral high ground | moral high ground, moral superiority, self righteousness | An argument that "evil has no rights" that must be respected by "the good and the righteous", in direct denial of the "golden rule". See also: appeal to heaven, moving the goalposts. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 568_lf |
moral superiority | moral high ground, moral superiority, self righteousness | An argument that "evil has no rights" that must be respected by "the good and the righteous", in direct denial of the "golden rule". See also: appeal to heaven, moving the goalposts. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 570_lf |
self righteousness | moral high ground, moral superiority, self righteousness | An argument that "evil has no rights" that must be respected by "the good and the righteous", in direct denial of the "golden rule". See also: appeal to heaven, moving the goalposts. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 629_lf |
mood-congruent memory bias | mood-congruent memory bias, state-dependent memory | A tendency in which "recall of information" is "congruent with one's current mood". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 249_cb |
state-dependent memory | mood-congruent memory bias, state-dependent memory | A tendency in which "recall of information" is "congruent with one's current mood". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 250_cb |
alpha-male speech | locker-room talk, bad-boy talk | A form of "frank, unguarded or uninhibited offensive expression". A fallacy that holds that some words are excempt from criticism because they are simply the true expression of some perspective having merit due to their representing the uncensored expression of true feelings. See also: venting. See also: affective fallacy. Opposite to this are political correctness and scripted message. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-14 | 497_lf |
live as though you're dying | live as though you're dying, mortification, no pain no gain, pleasure-hating | An attempt to gain positive benefit from extreme exercise, the infliction of pain, intentional starvation, or similar practices while denying that discomfort and pain are definite signals warning against bodily damage. A "fallacy of logos". Opposite of: hedonism. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 551_lf |
mortification | live as though you're dying, mortification, no pain no gain, pleasure-hating | An attempt to gain positive benefit from extreme exercise, the infliction of pain, intentional starvation, or similar practices while denying that discomfort and pain are definite signals warning against bodily damage. A "fallacy of logos". Opposite of: hedonism. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 571_lf |
no pain no gain | live as though you're dying, mortification, no pain no gain, pleasure-hating | An attempt to gain positive benefit from extreme exercise, the infliction of pain, intentional starvation, or similar practices while denying that discomfort and pain are definite signals warning against bodily damage. A "fallacy of logos". Opposite of: hedonism. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 581_lf |
pleasure-hating | live as though you're dying, mortification, no pain no gain, pleasure-hating | An attempt to gain positive benefit from extreme exercise, the infliction of pain, intentional starvation, or similar practices while denying that discomfort and pain are definite signals warning against bodily damage. A "fallacy of logos". Opposite of: hedonism. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 602_lf |
venting | letting off steam, loose lips, venting | A claim that someone ought to be "excempt from criticism" becuase they were just venting, even though venting implies expression of their actual position on some matter. Opposite of: political correctness, scripted message. See also: affective fallacy, alpha-male speech,bad-boy talk, locker-room talk. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 665_lf |
letting off steam | letting off steam, loose lips, venting | A claim that someone ought to be "excempt from criticism" becuase they were just venting, even though venting implies expression of their actual position on some matter. Opposite of: political correctness, scripted message. See also: affective fallacy, alpha-male speech,bad-boy talk, locker-room talk. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 789_lf |
loose lips | letting off steam, loose lips, venting | A claim that someone ought to be "excempt from criticism" becuase they were just venting, even though venting implies expression of their actual position on some matter. Opposite of: political correctness, scripted message. See also: affective fallacy, alpha-male speech,bad-boy talk, locker-room talk. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 791_lf |
just plain folks | just plain folks, values | An argument that someone who speaks in simple terms and seems like a straight talker is necessarily worthy of being believed for that reason alone, especially in contrast with more sophisticated or fancier seeming speakers. A "corrupt...argument from ethos". See also: ad hominem fallacy, plain truth fallacy, simpleton's fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 547_lf |
values | just plain folks, values | An argument that someone who speaks in simple terms and seems like a straight talker is necessarily worthy of being believed for that reason alone, especially in contrast with more sophisticated or fancier seeming speakers. A "corrupt...argument from ethos". See also: ad hominem fallacy, plain truth fallacy, simpleton's fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 896_lf |
oops | judicial surprise, oh I forgot, I forgot, oops, October surprise | Typically, an attempt to end a debate by pretending to have "just remembered or uncovered some salient fact, argument or evidence", or suddenly presenting some sensational information only to then quuietly admit its lack of direct relevance to the topic at hand. A "corrupt argument from logos". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 589_lf |
oh I forgot | judicial surprise, oh I forgot, I forgot, oops, October surprise | Typically, an attempt to end a debate by pretending to have "just remembered or uncovered some salient fact, argument or evidence", or suddenly presenting some sensational information only to then quuietly admit its lack of direct relevance to the topic at hand. A "corrupt argument from logos". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 684_lf |
I forgot | judicial surprise, oh I forgot, I forgot, oops, October surprise | Typically, an attempt to end a debate by pretending to have "just remembered or uncovered some salient fact, argument or evidence", or suddenly presenting some sensational information only to then quuietly admit its lack of direct relevance to the topic at hand. A "corrupt argument from logos". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 685_lf |
October surprise | judicial surprise, oh I forgot, I forgot, oops, October surprise | Typically, an attempt to end a debate by pretending to have "just remembered or uncovered some salient fact, argument or evidence", or suddenly presenting some sensational information only to then quuietly admit its lack of direct relevance to the topic at hand. A "corrupt argument from logos". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 690_lf |
judicial surprise | judicial surprise, oh I forgot, I forgot, oops, October surprise | Typically, an attempt to end a debate by pretending to have "just remembered or uncovered some salient fact, argument or evidence", or suddenly presenting some sensational information only to then quuietly admit its lack of direct relevance to the topic at hand. A "corrupt argument from logos". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 875_lf |
non sequitur | it does not follow, non sequitur | An "argument that does not follow from the previous statements"; "using a premise to prove an unrelated point"; "conclusions that have no logical connection to the argument at hand". Often, a writer may have left out a step of an argument they had in their head but did not put on paper. While "applicable in general to any type of logical fallacy", often used by logicials specifically to reference "syllogistic errors such as the undistributed middle term, non causa pro causa, and ignorantio elenchi". A component fallacy. Common examples are: affirming the consequent, denying the antecedent. | [1], [2], [3], [4] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 016_lf |
it does not follow | it does not follow, non sequitur | An "argument that does not follow from the previous statements"; "using a premise to prove an unrelated point"; "conclusions that have no logical connection to the argument at hand". Often, a writer may have left out a step of an argument they had in their head but did not put on paper. While "applicable in general to any type of logical fallacy", often used by logicials specifically to reference "syllogistic errors such as the undistributed middle term, non causa pro causa, and ignorantio elenchi". A component fallacy. Common examples are: affirming the consequent, denying the antecedent. | [1], [2], [3], [4] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 455_lf |
unconscious bias | implicit bias, unconscious bias | A pheneomenon of "underlying attitudes and stereotypes that people unconsciously attribute to another person or group of people that affect how they understand and engage with them". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 355_cb |
implicit bias | implicit bias, unconscious bias | A pheneomenon of "underlying attitudes and stereotypes that people unconsciously attribute to another person or group of people that affect how they understand and engage with them". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 356_cb |
illusory truth effect | illusion-of-truth effect, illusory truth effect | A tendency to "identify as true statements" ones that people "have previously heard (even if they cannot consciously remember having heard them), regardless of the actual validity of the statement." | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-21 | 222_cb |
illusion-of-truth effect | illusion-of-truth effect, illusory truth effect | A tendency to "identify as true statements" ones that people "have previously heard (even if they cannot consciously remember having heard them), regardless of the actual validity of the statement." | [6] | 2024-08-21 | 2024-08-28 | 813_cb |
sweeping generalization | ignoring qualifications, secundum quid, secundum quid et simpliciter, sweeping generalization | Literally, "secundum quid" means "according to something", and "secundum quid et simpliciter" means "what is true in a certain respect and what is true absolutely". A common type of "secundum quid" is: accident ("a dicto simpliciter ad dictum secundum quid"), in which a general rule is applied to an edge case that is actually an exception to the rule. Another common type of "secundum quid" is: converse accident ("a dicto secundum quid ad dictum simpliciter"), in which "a rule that applies only to an exceptional case is wrongly applied to all cases in general". See also: a dicto secundum quid ad dictum simpliciter, converse accident, destroying the exception, dicto simpliciter, hasty generalization, jumping to conclusions, reverse accident.[1], [2], [31], [32] | [1], [2], [31], [32] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 563_lf |
ignoring qualifications | ignoring qualifications, secundum quid, secundum quid et simpliciter, sweeping generalization | Literally, "secundum quid" means "according to something", and "secundum quid et simpliciter" means "what is true in a certain respect and what is true absolutely". A common type of "secundum quid" is: accident ("a dicto simpliciter ad dictum secundum quid"), in which a general rule is applied to an edge case that is actually an exception to the rule. Another common type of "secundum quid" is: converse accident ("a dicto secundum quid ad dictum simpliciter"), in which "a rule that applies only to an exceptional case is wrongly applied to all cases in general". See also: a dicto secundum quid ad dictum simpliciter, converse accident, destroying the exception, dicto simpliciter, hasty generalization, jumping to conclusions, reverse accident. | [1], [2], [31], [32] | 2024-08-26 | 2024-08-28 | 742_lf |
secundum quid | ignoring qualifications, secundum quid, secundum quid et simpliciter, sweeping generalization | Literally, "secundum quid" means "according to something", and "secundum quid et simpliciter" means "what is true in a certain respect and what is true absolutely". A common type of "secundum quid" is: accident ("a dicto simpliciter ad dictum secundum quid"), in which a general rule is applied to an edge case that is actually an exception to the rule. Another common type of "secundum quid" is: converse accident ("a dicto secundum quid ad dictum simpliciter"), in which "a rule that applies only to an exceptional case is wrongly applied to all cases in general". See also: a dicto secundum quid ad dictum simpliciter, converse accident, destroying the exception, dicto simpliciter, hasty generalization, jumping to conclusions, reverse accident. | [1], [2], [31], [32] | 2024-08-27 | 2024-08-28 | 786_lf |
secundum quid et simpliciter | ignoring qualifications, secundum quid, secundum quid et simpliciter | Literally, "secundum quid" means "according to something", and "secundum quid et simpliciter" means "what is true in a certain respect and what is true absolutely". A common type of "secundum quid" is: accident ("a dicto simpliciter ad dictum secundum quid"), in which a general rule is applied to an edge case that is actually an exception to the rule. Another common type of "secundum quid" is: converse accident ("a dicto secundum quid ad dictum simpliciter"), in which "a rule that applies only to an exceptional case is wrongly applied to all cases in general". See also: a dicto secundum quid ad dictum simpliciter, converse accident, destroying the exception, dicto simpliciter, hasty generalization, jumping to conclusions, reverse accident. | [1], [2], [31], [32] | 2024-08-26 | 2024-08-28 | 785_lf |
save the children fallacy | humanitarian crisis, save the children fallacy | Attracting public support for one side a distant crisis by invoking "in gross detail" the suffering of "the innocent, defenseless little children" while "conveniently ignoring the reality that innocent children on all sides usually suffer the most in any war, conflict, famine or crisis". A "fallacy of pathos". An example of: appeal to pity. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 620_lf |
humanitarian crisis | humanitarian crisis, save the children fallacy | Attracting public support for one side a distant crisis by invoking "in gross detail" the suffering of "the innocent, defenseless little children" while "conveniently ignoring the reality that innocent children on all sides usually suffer the most in any war, conflict, famine or crisis". A "fallacy of pathos". An example of: appeal to pity. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 771_lf |
hot stove effect | hot stove effect, once bitten twice shy, non-adaptive choice switching | A tendency to "avoid the choice previously made when faced with the same decision problem again, even though the choice was optimal" after "experiencing a bad outcome with a decision problem". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-28 | 805_cb |
non-adaptive choice switching | hot stove effect, once bitten twice shy, non-adaptive choice switching | A tendency to "avoid the choice previously made when faced with the same decision problem again, even though the choice was optimal" after "experiencing a bad outcome with a decision problem". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 259_cb |
once bitten twice shy | hot stove effect, once bitten twice shy, non-adaptive choice switching | A tendency to "avoid the choice previously made when faced with the same decision problem again, even though the choice was optimal" after "experiencing a bad outcome with a decision problem". | [6] | 2024-08-22 | 2024-08-28 | 804_cb |
hot hand | hot hand, hot-hand fallacy, hot hand phenomenon | A tendency to believe that "a person who has experienced success with a random event has a greater chance of further success in additional attempts". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-11 | 208_cb |
hot hand phenomenon | hot hand, hot-hand fallacy, hot hand phenomenon | A tendency to believe that "a person who has experienced success with a random event has a greater chance of further success in additional attempts". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-11 | 209_cb |
hot-hand fallacy | hot hand, hot-hand fallacy, hot hand phenomenon | A tendency to believe that "a person who has experienced success with a random event has a greater chance of further success in additional attempts". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-11 | 210_cb |
confirmation bias | homophily | The cognitive bias and logical fallacy of a tendency to "search for, interpret, focus on and remember information in a way that confirms one's preconceptions". Includes: backfire effect, congruence effect, experimenter's bias, expectation bias, observer-expectancy effect, selective perception, Semmelweis reflex. See also: defensiveness, half truth. | [3], [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-28 | 071_cb_lf |
hindsight bias | hindsight bias, hindsight is 20/20 effect, I-knew-it-all-along effect | A tendency to "see past events as having been predictable". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-11 | 203_cb |
I-knew-it-all-along effect | hindsight bias, hindsight is 20/20, I-knew-it-all-along effect | A tendency to "see past events as having been predictable". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-11 | 204_cb |
hindsight is 20/20 effect | hindsight bias, hindsight is 20/20, I-knew-it-all-along effect | A tendency to "see past events as having been predictable". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-11 | 205_cb |
hey sports fans | hey sports fans, moving the ball down the field, scoring, sports world fallacy | The inappropriate application of sports analogy to other domains. See also: evening up the score, getting even | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 537_lf |
moving the ball down the field | hey sports fans, moving the ball down the field, scoring, sports world fallacy | The inappropriate application of sports analogy to other domains. See also: evening up the score, getting even. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 573_lf |
scoring | hey sports fans, moving the ball down the field, scoring, sports world fallacy | The inappropriate application of sports analogy to other domains. See also: evening up the score, getting even. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 623_lf |
sports world fallacy | hey sports fans, moving the ball down the field, scoring, sports world fallacy | The inappropriate application of sports analogy to other domains. See also: evening up the score, getting even. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 641_lf |
perfect is the enemy of good | hero-busting, perfect is the enemy of good, the perfect is the enemy of the good | A fallacy of pointing out that nobody could have been a hero because "nobody and nothing in this world is perfect". Examples: pointing out the faults of historic figures generally held to have been otherwise heroic in some way; reviewing everything a political opponent has ever done or said to find something to condemn or misinterpret. A "postmodern fallacy of ethos". Opposite of: hereoes all. Can aid: identity fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-27 | 070_lf |
hero-busting | hero-busting, perfect is the enemy of good, the perfect is the enemy of the good | A fallacy of pointing out that nobody could have been a hero because "nobody and nothing in this world is perfect". Examples: pointing out the faults of historic figures generally held to have been otherwise heroic in some way; reviewing everything a political opponent has ever done or said to find something to condemn or misinterpret. A "postmodern fallacy of ethos". Opposite of: hereoes all. Can aid: identity fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-27 | 094_lf |
the perfect is the enemy of the good | hero-busting, perfect is the enemy of good, the perfect is the enemy of the good | A fallacy of pointing out that nobody could have been a hero because "nobody and nothing in this world is perfect". Examples: pointing out the faults of historic figures generally held to have been otherwise heroic in some way; reviewing everything a political opponent has ever done or said to find something to condemn or misinterpret. A "postmodern fallacy of ethos". Opposite of: hereoes all. Can aid: identity fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-27 | 483_lf |
nobody will ever know | heart of darkness syndrome, I think we're alone now, nobody will ever know, what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas | A fallacy holding that "one may freely commit immoral, selfish, negative or evil acts at will without expecting any of the normal consequences or punishment" "just because nobody important is looking (or because one is on vacation, or away in college, or overseas)". A counterpart to: appeal to privacy, mind your own business, MYOB, none of yer beeswax, so what, you're not the boss of me | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-26 | 582_lf |
I think we're alone now | heart of darkness syndrome, I think we're alone now, nobody will ever know, what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas | A fallacy holding that "one may freely commit immoral, selfish, negative or evil acts at will without expecting any of the normal consequences or punishment" "just because nobody important is looking (or because one is on vacation, or away in college, or overseas)". A counterpart to: appeal to privacy, mind your own business, MYOB, none of yer beeswax, so what, you're not the boss of me | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-26 | 687_lf |
heart of darkness syndrome | heart of darkness syndrome, I think we're alone now, nobody will ever know, what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas | A fallacy holding that "one may freely commit immoral, selfish, negative or evil acts at will without expecting any of the normal consequences or punishment" "just because nobody important is looking (or because one is on vacation, or away in college, or overseas)". A counterpart to: appeal to privacy, mind your own business, MYOB, none of yer beeswax, so what, you're not the boss of me | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-26 | 769_lf |
what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas | heart of darkness syndrome, I think we're alone now, nobody will ever know, what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas | A fallacy holding that "one may freely commit immoral, selfish, negative or evil acts at will without expecting any of the normal consequences or punishment" "just because nobody important is looking (or because one is on vacation, or away in college, or overseas)". A counterpart to: appeal to privacy, mind your own business, MYOB, none of yer beeswax, so what, you're not the boss of me | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-26 | 900_lf |
hasty conclusion | hasty conclusions, where there's smoke there's fire | Arriving at a snap conculsion without sufficient supporting evidence. Opposite of: paralysis of analysis. See also: jumping to conclusions. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 767_lf |
where there's smoke there's fire | hasty conclusions | Arriving at a snap conculsion without sufficient supporting evidence. Opposite of: paralysis of analysis. See also: jumping to conclusions. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 670_lf |
discredit by association | guilt by association | A fallacy of trying to argue against a point by "evoking the negative ethos" (the negative charcteristics) of the associations of the opponent (e.g., by way of their professional or social relationships, political party, religion, ethnicity, or other group or institutional memberhip). An extreme case is: for my enemies nothing. | 2024-06-16 | 2024-06-21 | 915_lf | |
intergroup bias | group-serving bias, intergroup bias, in-group bias, in-group favoritism, in-group-out-group bias, in-group preference | A tendency to favor members of a social group to which one blogs over people who are not members of that social group. | [6], [23] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-10 | 161_cb |
in-group favoritism | group-serving bias, intergroup bias, in-group bias, in-group favoritism, in-group-out-group bias, in-group preference | A tendency to favor members of a social group to which one blogs over people who are not members of that social group. | [6], [23] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-10 | 186_cb |
group-serving bias | group-serving bias, intergroup bias, in-group bias, in-group favoritism, in-group-out-group bias, in-group preference | A tendency to favor members of a social group to which one blogs over people who are not members of that social group. | [6], [23] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-10 | 196_cb |
in-group bias | group-serving bias, intergroup bias, in-group bias, in-group favoritism, in-group-out-group bias, in-group preference | A tendency to favor members of a social group to which one blogs over people who are not members of that social group. | [6], [23] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-10 | 225_cb |
in-group-out-group bias | group-serving bias, intergroup bias, in-group bias, in-group favoritism, in-group-out-group bias, in-group preference | A tendency to favor members of a social group to which one blogs over people who are not members of that social group. | [6], [23] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-10 | 715_cb |
in-group preference | group-serving bias, intergroup bias, in-group bias, in-group favoritism, in-group-out-group bias, in-group preference | A tendency to favor members of a social group to which one blogs over people who are not members of that social group. | [6], [23] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-10 | 717_cb |
simpleton's fallacy | good simpleton, simpleton's fallacy | A claim that uninformed perspectives are equally as valid as fully informed perspectives. A "fallacy of logos". See also: argument from ignorance, just plain folks, plain truth fallacy, third person effect. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 635_lf |
good simpleton | good simpleton, simpleton's fallacy | A claim that uninformed perspectives are equally as valid as fully informed perspectives. A "fallacy of logos". See also: argument from ignorance, just plain folks, plain truth fallacy, third person effect. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 764_lf |
generation effect | generation effect, self-generation effect | A tendnecy in which "self-generated information is remembered best". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-10 | 192_cb |
self-generation effect | generation effect, self-generation effect | A tendnecy in which "self-generated information is remembered best". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-10 | 193_cb |
anchoring bias | focalism | A tendency to rely too much on one particular thing (often the first available thing) when considering a decision. See also: common source bias, conservatism bias, functional fixedness, law of the instrument. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-14 | 103_cb |
familiarity principle | familiarity principle, mere exposure principle | A tendency to "express undue liking for things merely because of familiarity with them". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-09 | 180_cb |
mere exposure effect | familiarity principle, mere exposure principle | A tendency to "express undue liking for things merely because of familiarity with them". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-09 | 244_cb |
false balance | false balance, false equivalence, teach the controversy, two-sides fallacy | Presenting an issue in such a way that makes it seem as though there are "two sides of equal weight or significance, when in fact a consensus or much stronger argument supports just one side". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 631_lf |
two-sides fallacy | false balance, false equivalence, teach the controversy, two-sides fallacy | Presenting an issue in such a way that makes it seemas though there are "two sides of equal weight or significance, when in fact a consensus or much stronger argument supports just one side". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 664_lf |
teach the controversy | false balance, false equivalence, teach the controversy, two-sides fallacy | Presenting an issue in such a way that makes it seemas though there are "two sides of equal weight or significance, when in fact a consensus or much stronger argument supports just one side". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 871_lf |
false equivalence | false balance, false equivalence, teach the controversy, two-sides fallacy | Presenting an issue in such a way that makes it seem as though there are "two sides of equal weight or significance, when in fact a consensus or much stronger argument supports just one side". | [3] | 2024-08-28 | 2024-08-28 | 036_lf |
I can read you like a book | fallacy of speculation, mind-reading, I can read you like a book | A fallacy in which one claims to cleary understand another's thoughts, emotions, motivations, and body language based on mere speculation, at times claiming to understanding these things better than the subject himself. This speculative "knowledge" can be used in an attempt to incorrectly the support other claims. An ancient fallacy. A corruption of stasis theory (agreeing to disagree). The opposite of: autist's fallacy, mind blindness. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 678_lf |
fallacy of speculation | fallacy of speculation, mind-reading, I can read you like a book | A fallacy in which one claims to cleary understand another's thoughts, emotions, motivations, and body language based on mere speculation, at times claiming to understanding these things better than the subject himself. This speculative "knowledge" can be used in an attempt to incorrectly the support other claims. An ancient fallacy. A corruption of stasis theory (agreeing to disagree). The opposite of: autist's fallacy, mind blindness. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 757_lf |
fallacy of reification | fallacy of misplaced concreteness, fallacy of reification, hypostatization, mistaking the map for the territory, reification, reifying | A fallacy in which imaginary or abstract concepts or categories are treated as "actual, material things". Treating a word for something as the same as the thing itself. A "fallacy of ambiguity". See also: faulty analogy, essentializing, equivocation. | [1], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 027_lf |
fallacy of misplaced concreteness | fallacy of misplaced concreteness, fallacy of reification, hypostatization, mistaking the map for the territory, reification, reifying | A fallacy in which imaginary or abstract concepts or categories are treated as "actual, material things". Treating a word for something as the same as the thing itself. A "fallacy of ambiguity". See also: faulty analogy, essentializing, equivocation. | [1], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 435_lf |
hypostatization | fallacy of misplaced concreteness, fallacy of reification, hypostatization, mistaking the map for the territory, reification, reifying | A fallacy in which imaginary or abstract concepts or categories are treated as "actual, material things". Treating a word for something as the same as the thing itself. A "fallacy of ambiguity". See also: faulty analogy, essentializing, equivocation. | [1], [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-26 | 539_lf |
reifying | fallacy of misplaced concreteness, fallacy of reification, hypostatization, mistaking the map for the territory, reification, reifying | A fallacy in which imaginary or abstract concepts or categories are treated as "actual, material things". Treating a word for something as the same as the thing itself. A "fallacy of ambiguity". See also: faulty analogy, essentializing, equivocation. | [1], [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-26 | 614_lf |
reification | fallacy of misplaced concreteness, fallacy of reification, hypostatization, mistaking the map for the territory, reification, reifying | A fallacy in which imaginary or abstract concepts or categories are treated as "actual, material things". Treating a word for something as the same as the thing itself. A "fallacy of ambiguity". See also: faulty analogy, essentializing, equivocation. | [1], [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-26 | 788_lf |
mistaking the map for the territory | fallacy of misplaced concreteness, fallacy of reification, hypostatization, mistaking the map for the territory, reification, reifying | A fallacy in which imaginary or abstract concepts or categories are treated as "actual, material things". Treating a word for something as the same as the thing itself. A "fallacy of ambiguity". See also: faulty analogy, essentializing, equivocation. | [1], [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-26 | 802_lf |
snow job | falacia ad verbosium, information bias, snow job | An attempt to prove a claim by overwhelming an audience with "mountains of true but marginally-relevant documents, graphs, words, facts, numbers, information and statistics s that look extremely impressive but which the...audience cannot be expected to understand or evaluate properly." A "fallacy of logos". Opposite of: plain truth fallacy. See also: lying with statistics. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 637_lf |
falacia ad verbosium | falacia ad verbosium, information bias, snow job | An attempt to prove a claim by overwhelming an audience with "mountains of true but marginally-relevant documents, graphs, words, facts, numbers, information and statistics s that look extremely impressive but which the...audience cannot be expected to understand or evaluate properly." A "fallacy of logos". Opposite of: plain truth fallacy. See also: lying with statistics. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 755_lf |
middle of the road fallacy | falacia ad temperantiam, marginalization of the adversary, middle of the road fallacy, politics of the center | An argument that a position is correct "not on its own merits" but "solely or mainly by presenting it as the only moderate path among two or more obviously unacceptable extreme alternatives". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 562_lf |
falacia ad temperantiam | falacia ad temperantiam, marginalization of the adversary, middle of the road fallacy, politics of the center | An argument that a position is correct "not on its own merits" but "solely or mainly by presenting it as the only moderate path among two or more obviously unacceptable extreme alternatives". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 754_lf |
marginalization of the adversary | falacia ad temperantiam, marginalization of the adversary, middle of the road fallacy, politics of the center | An argument that a position is correct "not on its own merits" but "solely or mainly by presenting it as the only moderate path among two or more obviously unacceptable extreme alternatives". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 796_lf |
the politics of the center | falacia ad temperantiam, marginalization of the adversary, middle of the road fallacy, politics of the center | An argument that a position is correct "not on its own merits" but "solely or mainly by presenting it as the only moderate path among two or more obviously unacceptable extreme alternatives". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 877_lf |
infotainment | fake news, infotainment, infortainment, infowars | The deliberate mixing of "facts, news, falsities and outright lies with entertainment". See also: dog-whistle politics. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 543_lf |
fake news | fake news, infotainment, infortainment, infowars | The deliberate mixing of "facts, news, falsities and outright lies with entertainment". See also: dog-whistle politics. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 753_lf |
infortainment | fake news, infotainment, infortainment, infowars | The deliberate mixing of "facts, news, falsities and outright lies with entertainment". See also: dog-whistle politics. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 776_lf |
infowars | fake news, infotainment, infortainment, infowars | The deliberate mixing of "facts, news, falsities and outright lies with entertainment". See also: dog-whistle politics. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 777_lf |
fait accompli | fait accompli, get over it, love it or leave it, suck it up, there is no alternative, TINA | The rejection of opposing ideas on the basis that "there is no realistic alternative to a given standpoint, status or action, arbitrarily ruling any and all other options out of bounds, or announcing that a decision has been made and any further discussion is insubordination, disloyalty, treason, disobedience or simply a waste of precious time when there's a job to be done". An extension of: either/or fallacy. A form of: appeal to force, argument from force, argument from strength, argument from the club (stick), argumentum ad baculum, bullying, fascism, hard power, might-makes-right, muscular leadership, non-negotiable demands, power-play, resolution by force of arms, shock and awe. See also: taboo, finish the job. See also: appeal to closure, acquiescence, better the devil you know than the devil you don't, deal with it, default bias, get used to it, if it ain't broke don't fix it, it is what it is, let it be let it be, making one's peace with the situation, normalization of evil, this is the best of all possible worlds, whatever is is right. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 529_lf |
get over it | fait accompli, get over it, love it or leave it, suck it up, there is no alternative, TINA | The rejection of opposing ideas on the basis that "there is no realistic alternative to a given standpoint, status or action, arbitrarily ruling any and all other options out of bounds, or announcing that a decision has been made and any further discussion is insubordination, disloyalty, treason, disobedience or simply a waste of precious time when there's a job to be done". An extension of: either/or fallacy. A form of: appeal to force, argument from force, argument from strength, argument from the club (stick), argumentum ad baculum, bullying, fascism, hard power, might-makes-right, muscular leadership, non-negotiable demands, power-play, resolution by force of arms, shock and awe. See also: taboo, finish the job. See also: appeal to closure, acquiescence, better the devil you know than the devil you don't, deal with it, default bias, get used to it, if it ain't broke don't fix it, it is what it is, let it be let it be, making one's peace with the situation, normalization of evil, this is the best of all possible worlds, whatever is is right. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 534_lf |
love it or leave it | fait accompli, get over it, love it or leave it, suck it up, there is no alternative, TINA | The rejection of opposing ideas on the basis that "there is no realistic alternative to a given standpoint, status or action, arbitrarily ruling any and all other options out of bounds, or announcing that a decision has been made and any further discussion is insubordination, disloyalty, treason, disobedience or simply a waste of precious time when there's a job to be done". An extension of: either/or fallacy. A form of: appeal to force, argument from force, argument from strength, argument from the club (stick), argumentum ad baculum, bullying, fascism, hard power, might-makes-right, muscular leadership, non-negotiable demands, power-play, resolution by force of arms, shock and awe. See also: taboo, finish the job. See also: appeal to closure, acquiescence, better the devil you know than the devil you don't, deal with it, default bias, get used to it, if it ain't broke don't fix it, it is what it is, let it be let it be, making one's peace with the situation, normalization of evil, this is the best of all possible worlds, whatever is is right. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 555_lf |
suck it up | fait accompli, get over it, love it or leave it, suck it up, there is no alternative, TINA | The rejection of opposing ideas on the basis that "there is no realistic alternative to a given standpoint, status or action, arbitrarily ruling any and all other options out of bounds, or announcing that a decision has been made and any further discussion is insubordination, disloyalty, treason, disobedience or simply a waste of precious time when there's a job to be done". An extension of: either/or fallacy. A form of: appeal to force, argument from force, argument from strength, argument from the club (stick), argumentum ad baculum, bullying, fascism, hard power, might-makes-right, muscular leadership, non-negotiable demands, power-play, resolution by force of arms, shock and awe. See also: taboo, finish the job. See also: appeal to closure, acquiescence, better the devil you know than the devil you don't, deal with it, default bias, get used to it, if it ain't broke don't fix it, it is what it is, let it be let it be, making one's peace with the situation, normalization of evil, this is the best of all possible worlds, whatever is is right. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 647_lf |
TINA | fait accompli, get over it, love it or leave it, suck it up, there is no alternative, TINA | The rejection of opposing ideas on the basis that "there is no realistic alternative to a given standpoint, status or action, arbitrarily ruling any and all other options out of bounds, or announcing that a decision has been made and any further discussion is insubordination, disloyalty, treason, disobedience or simply a waste of precious time when there's a job to be done". An extension of: either/or fallacy. A form of: appeal to force, argument from force, argument from strength, argument from the club (stick), argumentum ad baculum, bullying, fascism, hard power, might-makes-right, muscular leadership, non-negotiable demands, power-play, resolution by force of arms, shock and awe. See also: taboo, finish the job. See also: appeal to closure, acquiescence, better the devil you know than the devil you don't, deal with it, default bias, get used to it, if it ain't broke don't fix it, it is what it is, let it be let it be, making one's peace with the situation, normalization of evil, this is the best of all possible worlds, whatever is is right. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 651_lf |
there is no alternative | fait accompli, get over it, love it or leave it, suck it up, there is no alternative, TINA | The rejection of opposing ideas on the basis that "there is no realistic alternative to a given standpoint, status or action, arbitrarily ruling any and all other options out of bounds, or announcing that a decision has been made and any further discussion is insubordination, disloyalty, treason, disobedience or simply a waste of precious time when there's a job to be done". An extension of: either/or fallacy. A form of: appeal to force, argument from force, argument from strength, argument from the club (stick), argumentum ad baculum, bullying, fascism, hard power, might-makes-right, muscular leadership, non-negotiable demands, power-play, resolution by force of arms, shock and awe. See also: taboo, finish the job. See also: appeal to closure, acquiescence, better the devil you know than the devil you don't, deal with it, default bias, get used to it, if it ain't broke don't fix it, it is what it is, let it be let it be, making one's peace with the situation, normalization of evil, this is the best of all possible worlds, whatever is is right. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 879_lf |
narrative fallacy | fable, narrative fallacy, poster child | Wrapping a message in a "heartwarming or horrifying story or fable" is more persusasive than more formal or direct argument, even if the story is fictional. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 577_lf |
fable | fable, narrative fallacy, poster child | Wrapping a message in a "heartwarming or horrifying story or fable" is more persusasive than more formal or direct argument, even if the story is fictional. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 752_lf |
poster child | fable, narrative fallacy, poster child | Wrapping a message in a "heartwarming or horrifying story or fable" is more persusasive than more formal or direct argument, even if the story is fictional. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 834_lf |
expectation bias | expectation bias, experimenter's bias | A tendency "for experimenters to believe, certify, and publish data that agree with their expectations for the outcome of an experiment, and to disbelieve, discard, or downgrade the corresponding weightings for data that appear to conflict with those expectations". An example of: confirmation bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-09 | 171_cb |
experimenter's bias | expectation bias, experimenter's bias | A tendency "for experimenters to believe, certify, and publish data that agree with their expectations for the outcome of an experiment, and to disbelieve, discard, or downgrade the corresponding weightings for data that appear to conflict with those expectations". An example of: confirmation bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-09 | 172_cb |
magical thinking | expect a miracle, magical thinking, sin of presumption | An argument that when it really matters, one just has to pray or do the right rituals and then a miracle will occur. A "fallacy... of logos". See also: appeal to heaven, Job's comforter fallacy, positive thinking. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 557_lf |
expect a miracle | expect a miracle, magical thinking, sin of presumption | An argument that when it really matters, one just has to pray or do the right rituals and then a miracle will occur. A "fallacy... of logos". See also: appeal to heaven, Job's comforter fallacy, positive thinking. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 751_lf |
sin of presumption | expect a miracle, magical thinking, sin of presumption | An argument that when it really matters, one just has to pray or do the right rituals and then a miracle will occur. A "fallacy... of logos". See also: appeal to heaven, Job's comforter fallacy, positive thinking. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 858_lf |
salience bias | executive summary, keep it short and simple, keep it simple stupid, KISS principle, monocausal fallacy, plain truth fallacy, salience bias, simple truth fallacy | As a cognitive bias, a tendency to "focus on items that are more prominent or emotionally striking and ignore those that are unremarkable, even though this difference is often irrelevant by objective standards". As a logical fallacy, the favoring of "familiar, singular, summarized or easily comprehensible data, examples, explanations and evidence over those that are more complex and unfamiliar but much closer to the truth". Might appear as "I don't want a whole lesson on it, just boil it down to the plain truth" or as an assertion that "the truth is always simple and only enemies of truth would make it complicated". A "fallacy of logos". Opposite of: complexity, ineffability, post-truth, truthiness. | [3], [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-28 | 308_cb_lf |
plain truth fallacy | executive summary, keep it short and simple, keep it simple stupid, KISS principle, monocausal fallacy, plain truth fallacy, salience bias, simple truth fallacy | The favoring of "familiar, singular, summarized or easily comprehensible data, examples, explanations and evidence over those that are more complex and unfamiliar but much closer to the truth". Might appear as "I don't want a whole lesson on it, just boil it down to the plain truth" or as an assertion that "the truth is always simple and only enemies of truth would make it complicated". A "fallacy of logos". Opposite of: complexity, ineffability, post-truth, truthiness. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 599_lf |
KISS principle | executive summary, keep it short and simple, keep it simple stupid, KISS principle, monocausal fallacy, plain truth fallacy, salience bias, simple truth fallacy | The favoring of "familiar, singular, summarized or easily comprehensible data, examples, explanations and evidence over those that are more complex and unfamiliar but much closer to the truth". Might appear as "I don't want a whole lesson on it, just boil it down to the plain truth" or as an assertion that "the truth is always simple and only enemies of truth would make it complicated". A "fallacy of logos". Opposite of: complexity, ineffability, post-truth, truthiness. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 689_lf |
executive summary | executive summary, keep it short and simple, keep it simple stupid, KISS principle, monocausal fallacy, plain truth fallacy, salience bias, simple truth fallacy | executive summary, keep it short and simple, keep it simple stupid, KISS principle, monocausal fallacy, plain truth fallacy, salience bias, simple truth fallacyThe favoring of "familiar, singular, summarized or easily comprehensible data, examples, explanations and evidence over those that are more complex and unfamiliar but much closer to the truth". Might appear as "I don't want a whole lesson on it, just boil it down to the plain truth" or as an assertion that "the truth is always simple and only enemies of truth would make it complicated". A "fallacy of logos". Opposite of: complexity, ineffability, post-truth, truthiness. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 749_lf |
keep it short and simple | executive summary, keep it short and simple, keep it simple stupid, KISS principle, monocausal fallacy, plain truth fallacy, salience bias, simple truth fallacy | The favoring of "familiar, singular, summarized or easily comprehensible data, examples, explanations and evidence over those that are more complex and unfamiliar but much closer to the truth". Might appear as "I don't want a whole lesson on it, just boil it down to the plain truth" or as an assertion that "the truth is always simple and only enemies of truth would make it complicated". A "fallacy of logos". Opposite of: complexity, ineffability, post-truth, truthiness. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 782_lf |
keep it simple stupid | executive summary, keep it short and simple, keep it simple stupid, KISS principle, monocausal fallacy, plain truth fallacy, salience bias, simple truth fallacy | The favoring of "familiar, singular, summarized or easily comprehensible data, examples, explanations and evidence over those that are more complex and unfamiliar but much closer to the truth". Might appear as "I don't want a whole lesson on it, just boil it down to the plain truth" or as an assertion that "the truth is always simple and only enemies of truth would make it complicated". A "fallacy of logos". Opposite of: complexity, ineffability, post-truth, truthiness. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 783_lf |
monocausal fallacy | executive summary, keep it short and simple, keep it simple stupid, KISS principle, monocausal fallacy, plain truth fallacy, salience bias, simple truth fallacy | The favoring of "familiar, singular, summarized or easily comprehensible data, examples, explanations and evidence over those that are more complex and unfamiliar but much closer to the truth". Might appear as "I don't want a whole lesson on it, just boil it down to the plain truth" or as an assertion that "the truth is always simple and only enemies of truth would make it complicated". A "fallacy of logos". Opposite of: complexity, ineffability, post-truth, truthiness. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 803_lf |
simple truth fallacy | executive summary, keep it short and simple, keep it simple stupid, KISS principle, monocausal fallacy, plain truth fallacy, salience bias, simple truth fallacy | The favoring of "familiar, singular, summarized or easily comprehensible data, examples, explanations and evidence over those that are more complex and unfamiliar but much closer to the truth". Might appear as "I don't want a whole lesson on it, just boil it down to the plain truth" or as an assertion that "the truth is always simple and only enemies of truth would make it complicated". A "fallacy of logos". Opposite of: complexity, ineffability, post-truth, truthiness. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 857_lf |
heroes all | everybody's a winner, heroes all | A fallacy holding that "everyone is above average or extraordinary". Opposite is: all the king's men. See also: hero-busting, identity fallacy, perfect is the enemy of good. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-07 | 096_lf |
everybody's a winner | everybody's a winner, heroes all | A fallacy holding that "everyone is above average or extraordinary". Opposite is: all the king's men. See also: hero-busting, identity fallacy, perfect is the enemy of good. | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-07 | 434_lf | |
law of unintended consequences | every revolution ends up eating its own young, grit, law of unintended consequences, resilience doctrine | An argument that, since it is impossible to know everything or to forsee anything, then unknown unknowns will always blindside and overwhelm, so therefore one must be prepared to maintain strength, withstand, and to recover as a main means of survival. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 549_lf |
every revolution ends up eating its own young | every revolution ends up eating its own young, grit, law of unintended consequences, resilience doctrine | An argument that, since it is impossible to know everything or to forsee anything, then unknown unknowns will always blindside and overwhelm, so therefore one must be prepared to maintain strength, withstand, and to recover as a main means of survival. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 748_lf |
grit | every revolution ends up eating its own young, grit, law of unintended consequences, resilience doctrine | An argument that, since it is impossible to know everything or to forsee anything, then unknown unknowns will always blindside and overwhelm, so therefore one must be prepared to maintain strength, withstand, and to recover as a main means of survival. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 765_lf |
resilience doctrine | every revolution ends up eating its own young, grit, law of unintended consequences, resilience doctrine | An argument that, since it is impossible to know everything or to forsee anything, then unknown unknowns will always blindside and overwhelm, so therefore one must be prepared to maintain strength, withstand, and to recover as a main means of survival. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 848_lf |
evening up the score | evening up the score, getting even | An argument for inflicting punishment on a false premise of life being a sporting event based on keeping track of scores. See also: hey sports fans, moving the baall down the field, scoring, sports world fallacy | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 527_lf |
getting even | evening up the score, getting even | An argument for inflicting punishment on a false premise of life being a sporting event based on keeping track of scores. See also: hey sports fans, moving the baall down the field, scoring, sports world fallacy | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 763_lf |
etymological fallacy | etymological fallacy, underlying meaning | A fallacy of "drawing false conclusions from the...linguistic origins of a current word" or the "alleged meanings or associations of that word in another langauge". "A fallacy of logos."" | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-06 | 084_lf |
underlying meaning | etymological fallacy, underlying meaning | A fallacy of "drawing false conclusions from the...linguistic origins of a current word" or the "alleged meanings or associations of that word in another langauge". "A fallacy of logos."" | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-06 | 893_lf |
esoteric knowledge | esoteric wisdom, gnosticism, inner truth, inner sanctum, need to know | A fallacy holding that "there is some knowledge reserved only for the wise, the holy or the enlightened, (or those with proper security clearance), things that the masses cannot understand and do not deserve to know, at least not until they become wiser, more trusted or more spiritually advanced". A "fallacy from logos and ethos". A counterpart is: obscurantism, obscurationism, willful ignorance. See also: plain truth fallacy, argument from mystery, argumentum ad mysteriam, mystagogy. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 082_lf |
esoteric wisdom | esoteric wisdom, gnosticism, inner truth, inner sanctum, need to know | A fallacy holding that "there is some knowledge reserved only for the wise, the holy or the enlightened, (or those with proper security clearance), things that the masses cannot understand and do not deserve to know, at least not until they become wiser, more trusted or more spiritually advanced". A "fallacy from logos and ethos". A counterpart is: obscurantism, obscurationism, willful ignorance. See also: plain truth fallacy, argument from mystery, argumentum ad mysteriam, mystagogy. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 433_lf |
gnosticism | esoteric wisdom, gnosticism, inner truth, inner sanctum, need to know | A fallacy holding that "there is some knowledge reserved only for the wise, the holy or the enlightened, (or those with proper security clearance), things that the masses cannot understand and do not deserve to know, at least not until they become wiser, more trusted or more spiritually advanced". A "fallacy from logos and ethos". A counterpart is: obscurantism, obscurationism, willful ignorance. See also: plain truth fallacy, argument from mystery, argumentum ad mysteriam, mystagogy. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 443_lf |
inner sanctum | esoteric wisdom, gnosticism, inner truth, inner sanctum, need to know | A fallacy holding that "there is some knowledge reserved only for the wise, the holy or the enlightened, (or those with proper security clearance), things that the masses cannot understand and do not deserve to know, at least not until they become wiser, more trusted or more spiritually advanced". A "fallacy from logos and ethos". A counterpart is: obscurantism, obscurationism, willful ignorance. See also: plain truth fallacy, argument from mystery, argumentum ad mysteriam, mystagogy. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 453_lf |
inner truth | esoteric wisdom, gnosticism, inner truth, inner sanctum, need to know | A fallacy holding that "there is some knowledge reserved only for the wise, the holy or the enlightened, (or those with proper security clearance), things that the masses cannot understand and do not deserve to know, at least not until they become wiser, more trusted or more spiritually advanced". A "fallacy from logos and ethos". A counterpart is: obscurantism, obscurationism, willful ignorance. See also: plain truth fallacy, argument from mystery, argumentum ad mysteriam, mystagogy. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 454_lf |
need to know | esoteric wisdom, gnosticism, inner truth, inner sanctum, need to know | A fallacy holding that "there is some knowledge reserved only for the wise, the holy or the enlightened, (or those with proper security clearance), things that the masses cannot understand and do not deserve to know, at least not until they become wiser, more trusted or more spiritually advanced". A "fallacy from logos and ethos". A counterpart is: obscurantism, obscurationism, willful ignorance. See also: plain truth fallacy, argument from mystery, argumentum ad mysteriam, mystagogy. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 464_lf |
sunk cost fallacy | escalation of commitment, irrational escalation, sunk cost fallacy, throwing good money after bad | As a cognitive bias, a tendency in which "people justify increased investment in a decision, based on the cumulative prior investment, despite new evidence suggesting that the decision was probably wrong". As a logical fallacy, claiming that new investment is needed or else the prior investment would be lost, while ignoring the probability that additional investment will not result in actual gains, either. See also: argument from inertia. | [3], [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-28 | 336_cb_lf |
escalation of commitment | escalation of commitment, irrational escalation, sunk cost fallacy | A tendency in which "people justify increased investment in a decision, based on the cumulative prior investment, despite new evidence suggesting that the decision was probably wrong". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-28 | 168_cb |
irrational escalation | escalation of commitment, irrational escalation, sunk cost fallacy | A tendency in which "people justify increased investment in a decision, based on the cumulative prior investment, despite new evidence suggesting that the decision was probably wrong". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-09 | 231_cb_lf |
trust your gut | emotional reasoning, trust your feelings, trust your gut, trust your heart, trust your instincts, trust your intuition | The use primarily of gut feelings instead of reason or evidence when deciding something. A "corrupt argument from pathos". See also: affective fallacy, deliberate ignorance, third person effect. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 660_lf |
emotional reasoning | emotional reasoning, trust your feelings, trust your gut, trust your heart, trust your instincts, trust your intuition | The use primarily of gut feelings instead of reason or evidence when deciding something. A "corrupt argument from pathos". See also: affective fallacy, deliberate ignorance, third person effect. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 745_lf |
trust your feelings | emotional reasoning, trust your feelings, trust your gut, trust your heart, trust your instincts, trust your intuition | The use primarily of gut feelings instead of reason or evidence when deciding something. A "corrupt argument from pathos". See also: affective fallacy, deliberate ignorance, third person effect. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 886_lf |
trust your heart | emotional reasoning, trust your feelings, trust your gut, trust your heart, trust your instincts, trust your intuition | The use primarily of gut feelings instead of reason or evidence when deciding something. A "corrupt argument from pathos". See also: affective fallacy, deliberate ignorance, third person effect. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 887_lf |
trust your instincts | emotional reasoning, trust your feelings, trust your gut, trust your heart, trust your instincts, trust your intuition | The use primarily of gut feelings instead of reason or evidence when deciding something. A "corrupt argument from pathos". See also: affective fallacy, deliberate ignorance, third person effect. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 888_lf |
trust your intuition | emotional reasoning, trust your feelings, trust your gut, trust your heart, trust your instincts, trust your intuition | The use primarily of gut feelings instead of reason or evidence when deciding something. A "corrupt argument from pathos". See also: affective fallacy, deliberate ignorance, third person effect. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 889_lf |
star power | eminence-based practice, falacia ad verecundiam, faulty use of authority, questionable authority, star power, testimonial | A fallacy in which arguments "are granted fame and validity or condemed to obscurity soley by whoever may be the reigning stars or premier journals of the profession or discpline at the moment". A "corrupt argument from ethos". Includes: faulty use of quotes. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-21 | 643_lf |
eminence-based practice | eminence-based practice, falacia ad verecundiam, faulty use of authority, questionable authority, star power, testimonial | A fallacy in which arguments "are granted fame and validity or condemed to obscurity soley by whoever may be the reigning stars or premier journals of the profession or discpline at the moment". A "corrupt argument from ethos". Includes: faulty use of quotes. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-21 | 744_lf |
falacia ad verecundiam | eminence-based practice, falacia ad verecundiam, faulty use of authority, questionable authority, star power, testimonial | A fallacy in which arguments "are granted fame and validity or condemed to obscurity soley by whoever may be the reigning stars or premier journals of the profession or discpline at the moment". A "corrupt argument from ethos". Includes: faulty use of quotes. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-21 | 756_lf |
faulty use of authority | eminence-based practice, falacia ad verecundiam, faulty use of authority, questionable authority, star power, testimonial | A fallacy in which arguments "are granted fame and validity or condemed to obscurity soley by whoever may be the reigning stars or premier journals of the profession or discpline at the moment". A "corrupt argument from ethos". Includes: faulty use of quotes. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-21 | 759_lf |
questionable authority | eminence-based practice, falacia ad verecundiam, faulty use of authority, questionable authority, star power, testimonial | A fallacy in which arguments "are granted fame and validity or condemed to obscurity soley by whoever may be the reigning stars or premier journals of the profession or discpline at the moment". A "corrupt argument from ethos". Includes: faulty use of quotes. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-21 | 840_lf |
testimonial | eminence-based practice, falacia ad verecundiam, faulty use of authority, questionable authority, star power, testimonial | A fallacy in which arguments "are granted fame and validity or condemed to obscurity soley by whoever may be the reigning stars or premier journals of the profession or discpline at the moment". A "corrupt argument from ethos". Includes: faulty use of quotes. | [3] | 2024-06-21 | 2024-08-28 | 916_lf |
ego quoque | ego quoque, I do it too, nos quoque, we do it too | The attempted justification (or minimization of criticism) of some position or action on the basis that oneself or one's own group has also done the same thing. See also: and you too, appeal to hypocrisy, tu quoque, two wrongs make a right, you also, you do it too. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-27 | 448_lf |
nos quoque | ego quoque, I do it too, nos quoque, we do it too | The attempted justification (or minimization of criticism) of some position or action on the basis that oneself or one's own group has also done the same thing. See also: and you too, appeal to hypocrisy, tu quoque, two wrongs make a right, you also, you do it too. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 523_lf |
I do it too | ego quoque, I do it too, nos quoque, we do it too | The attempted justification (or minimization of criticism) of some position or action on the basis that oneself or one's own group has also done the same thing. See also: and you too, appeal to hypocrisy, tu quoque, two wrongs make a right, you also, you do it too. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 682_lf |
we do it too | ego quoque, I do it too, nos quoque, we do it too | The attempted justification (or minimization of criticism) of some position or action on the basis that oneself or one's own group has also done the same thing. See also: and you too, appeal to hypocrisy, tu quoque, two wrongs make a right, you also, you do it too. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 898_lf |
dynamic inconsistency | dynamic inconsistency, time inconsistency | A scenario in which "a decision-maker's preferences change over time in such a way that a preference can become inconsistent at another point in time". See also: current moment bias, hyperbiolic discounting, present bias | [6], [21] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-07 | 163_cb |
time inconsistency | dynamic inconsistency, time inconsistency | A scenario in which "a decision-maker's preferences change over time in such a way that a preference can become inconsistent at another point in time". See also: current moment bias, hyperbiolic discounting, present bias. | [6], [21] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-07 | 704_cb |
draw your own conclusion fallacy | draw your own conclusion fallacy, let the facts speak for themselves, non-argument argument | A fallacy in which carefully selected (and perhaps shocking) facts are presented to an audience that is then asked immediately to come to their own conclusions, while people are more convinced when drawing a conclusion themselves rather than being presented with both an argument and the proposed conclusion together, and while the appropriate question would be "what has been allegedly proven and how?". A "fallacy of logos". See also: leading the witness fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 078_lf |
let the facts speak for themselves | draw your own conclusion fallacy, let the facts speak for themselves, non-argument argument | A fallacy in which carefully selected (and perhaps shocking) facts are presented to an audience that is then asked immediately to come to their own conclusions, while people are more convinced when drawing a conclusion themselves rather than being presented with both an argument and the proposed conclusion together, and while the appropriate question would be "what has been allegedly proven and how?". A "fallacy of logos". See also: leading the witness fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 457_lf |
non-argument argument | draw your own conclusion fallacy, let the facts speak for themselves, non-argument argument | A fallacy in which carefully selected (and perhaps shocking) facts are presented to an audience that is then asked immediately to come to their own conclusions, while people are more convinced when drawing a conclusion themselves rather than being presented with both an argument and the proposed conclusion together, and while the appropriate question would be "what has been allegedly proven and how?". A "fallacy of logos". See also: leading the witness fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 465_lf |
taboo | dogmatism, taboo | Arbitrarily claiming that certain "arguments, assumptions, dogmas, standpoints, or actions" are not open to discussion. A form of: argumentum ad baculum. See also: mind your own business, tone policing, calling "cards". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 649_lf |
dogmatism | dogmatism, taboo | dogmatism, taboo | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 740_lf |
red herring | distraction, red herring | An attempt to change the subject or redirect argument from the issue at hand. A form of: arguing beside the point, ignorantio elenchi, ignoring the issue, irrelevant conclusion. Examples include: appeal to emotion, irrelevant conclusion, personal attack, straw man. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-28 | 039_lf |
distraction | distraction, red herring | An attempt to change the subject or redirect argument from the issue at hand. A form of: arguing beside the point, ignorantio elenchi, ignoring the issue, irrelevant conclusion. Examples include: appeal to emotion, irrelevant conclusion, personal attack, straw man. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 739_lf |
guilt by association | discredit by association | A fallacy of trying to argue against a point by "evoking the negative ethos" (the negative charcteristics) of the associations of the opponent (e.g., by way of their professional or social relationships, political party, religion, ethnicity, or other group or institutional memberhip). An extreme case is: for my enemies nothing. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-16 | 093_lf |
sui generis fallacy | difference, sui generis fallacy | A rejection of "the validity of analogy and of inductive reasoning altogether" on the basis that " any given person, place, thing or idea under consideration is...different and unique, in a class unto itself". Literally, "sui generis" means "of its own kind". Opposite of: false analogy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 648_lf |
differance | difference, sui generis fallacy | A rejection of "the validity of analogy and of inductive reasoning altogether" on the basis that " any given person, place, thing or idea under consideration is...different and unique, in a class unto itself". Literally, "sui generis" means "of its own kind". Opposite of: false analogy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 737_lf |
identity fallacy | die away ye old forms and logic, identity fallacy, identity politics | A scenario in which the "validity of one's logic, evidence, experience or arguments depends not on their own strength but rather on whether the one arguing is a member of a given social class, generation, nationality, religious or ethnic group, color, gender or sexual orientation, profession, occupation or subgroup". See also: cultural appropriation. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 540_lf |
die away ye old forms and logic | die away ye old forms and logic, identity fallacy, identity politics | A scenario in which the "validity of one's logic, evidence, experience or arguments depends not on their own strength but rather on whether the one arguing is a member of a given social class, generation, nationality, religious or ethnic group, color, gender or sexual orientation, profession, occupation or subgroup". See also: cultural appropriation. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 736_lf |
identity politics | die away ye old forms and logic, identity fallacy, identity politics | A scenario in which the "validity of one's logic, evidence, experience or arguments depends not on their own strength but rather on whether the one arguing is a member of a given social class, generation, nationality, religious or ethnic group, color, gender or sexual orientation, profession, occupation or subgroup". See also: cultural appropriation. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 773_lf |
faulty use of quotes | devil quotes scripture, faulty use of quotes | The use of quotations "out of context or against the clear intent of the original speaker or author". See also: eminence-based practice, falacia ad verecundiam, faulty use of authority, questionable authority, star power, testimonial. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 531_lf |
devil quotes scripture | devil quotes scripture, faulty use of quotes | The use of quotations "out of context or against the clear intent of the original speaker or author". See also: eminence-based practice, falacia ad verecundiam, faulty use of authority, questionable authority, star power, testimonial. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 734_lf |
dehumanised perception | dehumanised perception, dehumanization | As a cognitive bias: a phenomenon of "not attributing feelings or thoughts to another person"; a form of: objectification. As a logical fallacy: a "faulty analogy where opponents are dismissed as mere cockroaches, lice, apes, monkeys, rats, weasels or bloodsucking parasites who have no right to speak or to live at all, and probably should be squashed like bugs"; opposite of: Polyanna principle, projection bias, singing kumbay, they're just like us; see also: identity fallacy, name calling, olfactory rhetoric. | [3], [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-07 | 151_cb |
dehumanization | dehumanised perception, dehumanization | As a cognitive bias: a phenomenon of "not attributing feelings or thoughts to another person"; a form of: objectification. As a logical fallacy: a "faulty analogy where opponents are dismissed as mere cockroaches, lice, apes, monkeys, rats, weasels or bloodsucking parasites who have no right to speak or to live at all, and probably should be squashed like bugs"; opposite of: Polyanna principle, projection bias, singing kumbay, they're just like us; see also: identity fallacy, name calling, olfactory rhetoric. | [3], [6] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-07 | 517_cb_lf |
F-bomb | cursing, F-bomb, obscenity, profanity | An attempt to "defend or strengthen one's argument with gratuitous, unrelated sexual, obscene, vulgar, crude or profane language when such language does nothing to make an argument stronger, other than perhaps to create a sense of identity with certain...audiences". A fallacy of pathos. Related to: salacious fallacy. See also: red herring. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 086_lf |
cursing | cursing, F-bomb, obscenity, profanity | An attempt to "defend or strengthen one's argument with gratuitous, unrelated sexual, obscene, vulgar, crude or profane language when such language does nothing to make an argument stronger, other than perhaps to create a sense of identity with certain...audiences". A fallacy of pathos. Related to: salacious fallacy. See also: red herring. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 426_lf |
obscenity | cursing, F-bomb, obscenity, profanity | An attempt to "defend or strengthen one's argument with gratuitous, unrelated sexual, obscene, vulgar, crude or profane language when such language does nothing to make an argument stronger, other than perhaps to create a sense of identity with certain...audiences". A fallacy of pathos. Related to: salacious fallacy. See also: red herring. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 466_lf |
profanity | cursing, F-bomb, obscenity, profanity | An attempt to "defend or strengthen one's argument with gratuitous, unrelated sexual, obscene, vulgar, crude or profane language when such language does nothing to make an argument stronger, other than perhaps to create a sense of identity with certain...audiences". A fallacy of pathos. Related to: salacious fallacy. See also: red herring. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 471_lf |
current moment bias | current moment bias, hyperbolic discounting, present bias | A tendency "for people to have a stronger preference for more immediate payoffs relative to later payoffs". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-07 | 150_cb |
hyperbolic discounting | current moment bias, hyperbolic discounting, present bias | A tendency "for people to have a stronger preference for more immediate payoffs relative to later payoffs". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-07 | 212_cb |
present bias | current moment bias, hyperbolic discounting, present bias | A tendency "for people to have a stronger preference for more immediate payoffs relative to later payoffs". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-07 | 284_cb |
wisdom of the crowd | crowdsourcing, magic of the market, wisdom of the crowd, Wikipedia fallacy | The idea that the market or the crowd is infallible, ignoring historical examples of the majority having been wrong about something. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 673_lf |
Wikipedia fallacy | crowdsourcing, magic of the market, wisdom of the crowd, Wikipedia fallacy | The idea that the market or the crowd is infallible, ignoring historical examples of the majority having been wrong about something. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 692_lf |
crowdsourcing | crowdsourcing, magic of the market, wisdom of the crowd, Wikipedia fallacy | The idea that the market or the crowd is infallible, ignoring historical examples of the majority having been wrong about something. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 730_lf |
magic of the market | crowdsourcing, magic of the market, wisdom of the crowd, Wikipedia fallacy | The idea that the market or the crowd is infallible, ignoring historical examples of the majority having been wrong about something. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 793_lf |
correlation implies causation | correlation implies causation, cum hoc ergo propter hoc | Claiming that "because two things occurr at the same time, one has caused the other". See also: coincidental correlation, false cause, false cause and effect, non causa pro causa, not the cause for the cause, after this therefore because of this, post hoc argument, post hoc propter hoc, post hoc ergo propter hoc. | [1], [2], [3], [4] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 035_lf |
cum hoc ergo propter hoc | correlation implies causation, cum hoc ergo propter hoc | Claiming that "because two things occurr at the same time, one has caused the other". See also: coincidental correlation, false cause, false cause and effect, non causa pro causa, not the cause for the cause, after this therefore because of this, post hoc argument, post hoc propter hoc, post hoc ergo propter hoc. | [1], [2], [3], [4] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 425_lf |
muscular foreign policy | control voice, muscular foreign policy, no discussion, no negotiation, peace through strength | The rejection of reasoned dialogue along with the offer of "either instant, unconditional compliance...or defeat as the only two options for settling even minor differences". A from of: appeal to force, argument from force, argument from strength, argument from the club (stick), argumentum ad baculum, bullying, fascism, hard power, might-makes-right, muscular leadership, non-negotiable demands, power-play, resolution by force of arms, shock and awe. See also: pout. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 530_lf |
no discussion | control voice, muscular foreign policy, no discussion, no negotiation, peace through strength | The rejection of reasoned dialogue along with the offer of "either instant, unconditional compliance...or defeat as the only two options for settling even minor differences". A from of: appeal to force, argument from force, argument from strength, argument from the club (stick), argumentum ad baculum, bullying, fascism, hard power, might-makes-right, muscular leadership, non-negotiable demands, power-play, resolution by force of arms, shock and awe. See also: pout. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 580_lf |
control voice | control voice, muscular foreign policy, no discussion, no negotiation, peace through strength | The rejection of reasoned dialogue along with the offer of "either instant, unconditional compliance...or defeat as the only two options for settling even minor differences". A from of: appeal to force, argument from force, argument from strength, argument from the club (stick), argumentum ad baculum, bullying, fascism, hard power, might-makes-right, muscular leadership, non-negotiable demands, power-play, resolution by force of arms, shock and awe. See also: pout. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 728_lf |
no negotiation | control voice, muscular foreign policy, no discussion, no negotiation, peace through strength | The rejection of reasoned dialogue along with the offer of "either instant, unconditional compliance...or defeat as the only two options for settling even minor differences". A from of: appeal to force, argument from force, argument from strength, argument from the club (stick), argumentum ad baculum, bullying, fascism, hard power, might-makes-right, muscular leadership, non-negotiable demands, power-play, resolution by force of arms, shock and awe. See also: pout. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 809_lf |
peace through strength | control voice, muscular foreign policy, no discussion, no negotiation, peace through strength | The rejection of reasoned dialogue along with the offer of "either instant, unconditional compliance...or defeat as the only two options for settling even minor differences". A from of: appeal to force, argument from force, argument from strength, argument from the club (stick), argumentum ad baculum, bullying, fascism, hard power, might-makes-right, muscular leadership, non-negotiable demands, power-play, resolution by force of arms, shock and awe. See also: pout. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 825_lf |
regressive bias | conservatism bias, regressive bias | As a memory cognitive bias, the tendency "to remember high values and high likelihoods/probabilities/frequencies as lower than they actually were and low ones as higher than they actually were" ("memories are not extreme enough"). | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-07 | 064_ | |
conservatism bias | conservatism bias, regressive bias | As an anchoring cognitive bias, the tendency "to insufficiently revise one's belief when presented with new evidence". As a memory cognitive bias, the tendency "to remember high values and high likelihoods/probabilities/frequencies as lower than they actually were and low ones as higher than they actually were" ("memories are not extreme enough") [in this sense also known as regressive bias]. See also, as a logical fallacy: conservative bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-07 | 141_cb |
homophily | confirmation bias, homophily | The cognitive bias and logical fallacy of a tendency to "search for, interpret, focus on and remember information in a way that confirms one's preconceptions". Includes: backfire effect, congruence effect, experimenter's bias, expectation bias, observer-expectancy effect, selective perception, Semmelweis reflex. See also: defensiveness, half truth. | [3], [6] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 770_lf |
ableism | con artist's fallacy, dacoit's fallacy, shearing the sheeple, profiteering, vulture capitalism, wealth is the disease and I am the cure | Fallacy saying that those who are less capable therefore are less deserving and therefore can be justifiably victimized due to how nature is. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-12 | 040_lf |
con artist's fallacy | con artist's fallacy, dacoit's fallacy, shearing the sheeple, profiteering, vulture capitalism, wealth is the disease and I am the cure | Fallacy saying that those who are less capable therefore are less deserving and therefore can be justifiably victimized due to how nature is. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 726_lf |
dacoit's fallacy | con artist's fallacy, dacoit's fallacy, shearing the sheeple, profiteering, vulture capitalism, wealth is the disease and I am the cure | Fallacy saying that those who are less capable therefore are less deserving and therefore can be justifiably victimized due to how nature is. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 732_lf |
con artist's fallacy | con artist's fallacy, dacoit's fallacy, profiteering, shearing the sheeple, vulture capitalism, wealth is the disease and I am the cure | Fallacy saying that those who are less capable therefore are less deserving and therefore can be justifiably victimized due to how nature is. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 421_lf |
dacoits fallacy | con artist's fallacy, dacoit's fallacy, profiteering, shearing the sheeple, vulture capitalism, wealth is the disease and I am the cure | Fallacy saying that those who are less capable therefore are less deserving and therefore can be justifiably victimized due to how nature is. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 427_lf |
profiteering | con artist's fallacy, dacoit's fallacy, profiteering, shearing the sheeple, vulture capitalism, wealth is the disease and I am the cure | Fallacy saying that those who are less capable therefore are less deserving and therefore can be justifiably victimized due to how nature is. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 472_lf |
shearing the sheeple | con artist's fallacy, dacoit's fallacy, profiteering, shearing the sheeple, vulture capitalism, wealth is the disease and I am the cure | Fallacy saying that those who are less capable therefore are less deserving and therefore can be justifiably victimized due to how nature is. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 477_lf |
vulture capitalism | con artist's fallacy, dacoit's fallacy, profiteering, shearing the sheeple, vulture capitalism, wealth is the disease and I am the cure | Fallacy saying that those who are less capable therefore are less deserving and therefore can be justifiably victimized due to how nature is. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 488_lf |
wealth is the disease and I am the cure | con artist's fallacy, dacoit's fallacy, profiteering, shearing the sheeple, vulture capitalism, wealth is the disease and I am the cure | Fallacy saying that those who are less capable therefore are less deserving and therefore can be justifiably victimized due to how nature is. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 489_lf |
complexity | complexity, ineffability, post-truth, truthiness | An arbitrary declaration tht "today's world is so complex that there is no truth" or that if truth does exist it is "unknowable excerpt perhaps by God". Opposite of: executive summary, keep it short and simple, keep it simple stupid, KISS principle, monocausal fallacy, plain truth fallacy, salience bias, simple truth fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 515_lf |
ineffability | complexity, ineffability, post-truth, truthiness | An arbitrary declaration tht "today's world is so complex that there is no truth" or that if truth does exist it is "unknowable excerpt perhaps by God". Opposite of: executive summary, keep it short and simple, keep it simple stupid, KISS principle, monocausal fallacy, plain truth fallacy, salience bias, simple truth fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 541_lf |
post-truth | complexity, ineffability, post-truth, truthiness | An arbitrary declaration tht "today's world is so complex that there is no truth" or that if truth does exist it is "unknowable excerpt perhaps by God". Opposite of: executive summary, keep it short and simple, keep it simple stupid, KISS principle, monocausal fallacy, plain truth fallacy, salience bias, simple truth fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 607_lf |
truthiness | complexity, ineffability, post-truth, truthiness | An arbitrary declaration tht "today's world is so complex that there is no truth" or that if truth does exist it is "unknowable excerpt perhaps by God". Opposite of: executive summary, keep it short and simple, keep it simple stupid, KISS principle, monocausal fallacy, plain truth fallacy, salience bias, simple truth fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 661_lf |
complex question | complex question, loaded question | The phrasing of a question or statement to imply that an "unproven statement is true without evidence or discussion". A "fallacy of omission". Often overlaps with: begging the question. A counterpart of: either/or reasoning. | [1] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 032_lf |
loaded question | complex question, loaded question | The phrasing of a question or statement to imply that an "unproven statement is true without evidence or discussion". A "fallacy of omission". Often overlaps with: begging the question. A counterpart of: either/or reasoning. | [1] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 458_lf |
two truths | compartmentalization, epistemically closed systems, two truths | A position that "there exists one truth in one given environment (e.g., in science, work or school) and simultaneously a different, formally contradictory but equally true truth in a different epistemic system, context, environment, intended audience or discourse community (e.g., in one's religion or at home)". A "fallacy of logos and ethos". See also: alternative truth, disciplinary blinders. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 663_lf |
compartmentalization | compartmentalization, epistemically closed systems, two truths | A position that "there exists one truth in one given environment (e.g., in science, work or school) and simultaneously a different, formally contradictory but equally true truth in a different epistemic system, context, environment, intended audience or discourse community (e.g., in one's religion or at home)". A "fallacy of logos and ethos". See also: alternative truth, disciplinary blinders. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 724_lf |
epistemically closed systems | compartmentalization, epistemically closed systems, two truths | A position that "there exists one truth in one given environment (e.g., in science, work or school) and simultaneously a different, formally contradictory but equally true truth in a different epistemic system, context, environment, intended audience or discourse community (e.g., in one's religion or at home)". A "fallacy of logos and ethos". See also: alternative truth, disciplinary blinders. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 746_lf |
compadrismo | compadrismo | Automatically regarding a claim or action as "true, correct, and above challenge" because "one is related to, knows and likes, or is on the same team or side, or belongs to the same religion, party, club or fraternity as the individual involved". A "corrupt argument from ethos". Reverse of: ad hominem. See also: identity fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 420_lf |
false cause | coincidental correlation, false cause, false cause and effect | Claiming or establishing "a cause/effect relationship that does not exist". A component fallacy. Examples include: correlation implies causation, cum hoc ergo propter hoc, non causa pro causa, not the cause for the cause, after this therefore because of this, post hoc argument, post hoc propter hoc, post hoc ergo propter hoc. | [1], [2], [4] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 013_lf |
false cause and effect | coincidental correlation, false cause, false cause and effect | Claiming or establishing "a cause/effect relationship that does not exist". A component fallacy. Examples include: correlation implies causation, cum hoc ergo propter hoc, non causa pro causa, not the cause for the cause, after this therefore because of this, post hoc argument, post hoc propter hoc, post hoc ergo propter hoc. | [1], [2], [4] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 320_lf |
coincidental correlation | coincidental correlation, false cause, false cause and effect | Claiming or establishing "a cause/effect relationship that does not exist". A component fallacy. Examples include: correlation implies causation, cum hoc ergo propter hoc, non causa pro causa, not the cause for the cause, after this therefore because of this, post hoc argument, post hoc propter hoc, post hoc ergo propter hoc. | [1], [2], [4] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 419_lf |
deliberate ignorance | closed-mindedness, deliberate ignorance, hear no evil see no evil speak no evil, I don't want to hear it, motivated ignorance, three monkeys' fallacy, tuning out | The action of "choosing not to listen", "turning off any information, evidence or arguments that challenge one's beliefs, ideology, standpoint, or peace of mind", perhaps saying "Don't try to confuse me with the facts; my mind is made up". See also: confirmation bias, obscurantism, obscurationism, positive thinking fallacy, simpleton's fallacy, third person effect, they're all crooks, trust your gut, willful ignorance. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 075_lf |
I don't want to hear it | closed-mindedness, deliberate ignorance, hear no evil see no evil speak no evil, I don't want to hear it, motivated ignorance, three monkeys' fallacy, tuning out | The action of "choosing not to listen", "turning off any information, evidence or arguments that challenge one's beliefs, ideology, standpoint, or peace of mind", perhaps saying "Don't try to confuse me with the facts; my mind is made up". See also: confirmation bias, obscurantism, obscurationism, positive thinking fallacy, simpleton's fallacy, third person effect, they're all crooks, trust your gut, willful ignorance. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 370_lf |
closed-mindedness | closed-mindedness, deliberate ignorance, hear no evil see no evil speak no evil, I don't want to hear it, motivated ignorance, three monkeys' fallacy, tuning out | The action of "choosing not to listen", "turning off any information, evidence or arguments that challenge one's beliefs, ideology, standpoint, or peace of mind", perhaps saying "Don't try to confuse me with the facts; my mind is made up". See also: confirmation bias, obscurantism, obscurationism, positive thinking fallacy, simpleton's fallacy, third person effect, they're all crooks, trust your gut, willful ignorance. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 418_lf |
motivated ignorance | closed-mindedness, deliberate ignorance, hear no evil see no evil speak no evil, I don't want to hear it, motivated ignorance, three monkeys' fallacy, tuning out | The action of "choosing not to listen", "turning off any information, evidence or arguments that challenge one's beliefs, ideology, standpoint, or peace of mind", perhaps saying "Don't try to confuse me with the facts; my mind is made up". See also: confirmation bias, obscurantism, obscurationism, positive thinking fallacy, simpleton's fallacy, third person effect, they're all crooks, trust your gut, willful ignorance. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 462_lf |
tuning out | closed-mindedness, deliberate ignorance, hear no evil see no evil speak no evil, I don't want to hear it, motivated ignorance, three monkeys' fallacy, tuning out | The action of "choosing not to listen", "turning off any information, evidence or arguments that challenge one's beliefs, ideology, standpoint, or peace of mind", perhaps saying "Don't try to confuse me with the facts; my mind is made up". See also: confirmation bias, obscurantism, obscurationism, positive thinking fallacy, simpleton's fallacy, third person effect, they're all crooks, trust your gut, willful ignorance. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 485_lf |
hear no evil see no evil speak no evil | closed-mindedness, deliberate ignorance, hear no evil see no evil speak no evil, I don't want to hear it, motivated ignorance, three monkeys' fallacy, tuning out | The action of "choosing not to listen", "turning off any information, evidence or arguments that challenge one's beliefs, ideology, standpoint, or peace of mind", perhaps saying "Don't try to confuse me with the facts; my mind is made up". See also: confirmation bias, obscurantism, obscurationism, positive thinking fallacy, simpleton's fallacy, third person effect, they're all crooks, trust your gut, willful ignorance. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-26 | 768_lf |
three monkeys' fallacy | closed-mindedness, deliberate ignorance, hear no evil see no evil speak no evil, I don't want to hear it, motivated ignorance, three monkeys' fallacy, tuning out | The action of "choosing not to listen", "turning off any information, evidence or arguments that challenge one's beliefs, ideology, standpoint, or peace of mind", perhaps saying "Don't try to confuse me with the facts; my mind is made up". See also: confirmation bias, obscurantism, obscurationism, positive thinking fallacy, simpleton's fallacy, third person effect, they're all crooks, trust your gut, willful ignorance. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-26 | 884_lf |
defensiveness | choice-support bias, choice-supportive bias, defensiveness, myside bias | A fallacy and bias in which "after one has taken a given decision, commitment or course of action, one automatically tends to defend that decision and to irrationally dismiss opposing options even when one's decision later on proves to be shaky or wrong". A "fallacy of ethos (one's own)". See also argument from inertia, confirmation bias. | [3], [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-05 | 074_lf |
choice-supportive bias | choice-support bias, choice-supportive bias, defensiveness, myside bias | A fallacy in which "after one has taken a given decision, commitment or course of action, one automatically tends to defend that decision and to irrationally dismiss opposing options even when one's decision later on proves to be shaky or wrong". A "fallacy of ethos (one's own)". See also argument from inertia, confirmation bias. | [3], [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-05 | 131_cb |
choice-support bias | choice-support bias, choice-supportive bias, defensiveness, myside bias | A fallacy and bias in which "after one has taken a given decision, commitment or course of action, one automatically tends to defend that decision and to irrationally dismiss opposing options even when one's decision later on proves to be shaky or wrong". A "fallacy of ethos (one's own)". See also argument from inertia, confirmation bias. | [3], [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-05 | 416_cb_lf |
myside bias | choice-support bias, choice-supportive bias, defensiveness, myside bias | A fallacy and bias in which "after one has taken a given decision, commitment or course of action, one automatically tends to defend that decision and to irrationally dismiss opposing options even when one's decision later on proves to be shaky or wrong". A "fallacy of ethos (one's own)". See also argument from inertia, confirmation bias. | [3], [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-05 | 463_lf |
all's fair in love and war | changing the rules, moving the goalposts, nuclear option, winning isn't everything it's the only thing | Starting with certain requirements for a decision, then, when, the criteria are met, requiring a higher bar. "A fallacy of logos". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-14 | 496_lf |
stacking the deck | card stacking, half truth, incomplete information, stacking the deck | A fallacy of ignoring examples or evidence that disprove one's point and instead only listing examples or sharing evidence which would support one's point. A fallacy of omission. A "corrupt argument from logos". Different from: straw man. See also: confirmation bias, hasty generalization. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-03 | 028_lf |
card stacking | card stacking, half truth, incomplete information, stacking the deck | A fallacy of ignoring examples or evidence that disprove one's point and instead only listing examples or sharing evidence which would support one's point. A fallacy of omission. A "corrupt argument from logos". Different from: straw man. See also: confirmation bias, hasty generalization. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-03 | 414_lf |
half truth | card stacking, half truth, incomplete information, stacking the deck | A fallacy of ignoring examples or evidence that disprove one's point and instead only listing examples or sharing evidence which would support one's point. A fallacy of omission. A "corrupt argument from logos". Different from: straw man. See also: confirmation bias, hasty generalization. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-03 | 447_lf |
incomplete information | card stacking, half truth, incomplete information, stacking the deck | A fallacy of ignoring examples or evidence that disprove one's point and instead only listing examples or sharing evidence which would support one's point. A fallacy of omission. A "corrupt argument from logos". Different from: straw man. See also: confirmation bias, hasty generalization. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-03 | 775_lf |
campaign promises | campaign promises, demagogy, motivational truth | A fallacy of "deliberately lying to the people to gain their support or motivate" some action desired by the promoter of the lie. Related: self deception, whistling by the graveyard. See also: argument to the people, argumentum ad populum, dog-whistle politics, othering. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 512_lf |
demagogy | campaign promises, demagogy, motivational truth | A fallacy of "deliberately lying to the people to gain their support or motivate" some action desired by the promoter of the lie. Related: self deception, whistling by the graveyard. See also: argument to the people, argumentum ad populum, dog-whistle politics, othering. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 518_lf |
motivational truth | campaign promises, demagogy, motivational truth | A fallacy of "deliberately lying to the people to gain their support or motivate" some action desired by the promoter of the lie. Related: self deception, whistling by the graveyard. See also: argument to the people, argumentum ad populum, dog-whistle politics, othering. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 572_lf |
camel's nose fallacy | camel's nose fallacy, domino theory, slippery slope | A fallacy holding that "one thing inevitably leads to another" when this is not necessarily the case. A non sequitur. | [1], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-03 | 413_lf |
slippery slope | camel's nose fallacy, domino theory, slippery slope | A fallacy holding that "one thing inevitably leads to another" when this is not necessarily the case. A non sequitur. A component fallacy. | [1], [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-03 | 636_lf |
domino theory | camel's nose fallacy, domino theory, slippery slope | A fallacy holding that "one thing inevitably leads to another" when this is not necessarily the case. A non sequitur. A component fallacy. | [1], [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-03 | 741_lf |
slippery slope fallacy | camel's nose fallacy | A fallacy holding that "one thing inevitably leads to another" when this is not necessarily the case. A non sequitur. A component fallacy. | [1], [2] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-03 | 017_lf |
accomplish the mission | by any means necessary, find a way, I don't care how you do it, just do it | An argumentum ad baculum (argument from force) that implies arriving at an outcome by setting aside morality. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-29 | 694_lf |
apathetic fallacy | burnout, compassion fatigue, cynicism | The fallacy in which legitimate arguments are ignored due claimed lack of caring. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-15 | 498_lf |
passive voice fallacy | bureaucratic passive, passive voice fallacy | An obverse is: be-verb fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 596_lf |
bureaucratic passive | bureaucratic passive, passive voice fallacy | An obverse is: be-verb fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 721_lf |
build a wall | build a wall, Gitmo solution, lock em up and throw away the key, NIMBY, not in my back yard, ostrich strategy | The idea that a problem ceases to exist for all practical purposes so long as it can be made to go away to somewhere that is out of sight, or censored, or ignored, perhaps with a focus on positive things instead. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 519_lf |
lock em up and throw away the key | build a wall, Gitmo solution, lock em up and throw away the key, NIMBY, not in my back yard, ostrich strategy | The idea that a problem ceases to exist for all practical purposes so long as it can be made to go away to somewhere that is out of sight, or censored, or ignored, perhaps with a focus on positive things instead. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 525_lf |
NIMBY | build a wall, Gitmo solution, lock em up and throw away the key, NIMBY, not in my back yard, ostrich strategy | The idea that a problem ceases to exist for all practical purposes so long as it can be made to go away to somewhere that is out of sight, or censored, or ignored, perhaps with a focus on positive things instead. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 526_lf |
not in my back yard | build a wall, Gitmo solution, lock em up and throw away the key, NIMBY, not in my back yard, ostrich strategy | The idea that a problem ceases to exist for all practical purposes so long as it can be made to go away to somewhere that is out of sight, or censored, or ignored, perhaps with a focus on positive things instead. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 584_lf |
Gitmo solution | build a wall, Gitmo solution, lock em up and throw away the key, NIMBY, not in my back yard, ostrich strategy | The idea that a problem ceases to exist for all practical purposes so long as it can be made to go away to somewhere that is out of sight, or censored, or ignored, perhaps with a focus on positive things instead. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 681_lf |
ostrich strategy | build a wall, Gitmo solution, lock em up and throw away the key, NIMBY, not in my back yard, ostrich strategy | The idea that a problem ceases to exist for all practical purposes so long as it can be made to go away to somewhere that is out of sight, or censored, or ignored, perhaps with a focus on positive things instead. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 820_lf |
zero tolerance | broken windows policing, disproportionate response, even one is too many, judenrein, exemplary punishment, zero-risk bias, zero tolerance | A fallacy of "declaring an 'emergency' and promising to disregard justice and due process and devote unlimited resources (and occasionally, unlimited cruelty) to stamp out a limited, insignificant or even nonexistent problem". A "corrupt and cynical argument from pathos". "Almost always politically driven." A "sinister" form of dog whistle politics. An example of: we have to do something (placebo effect, political theater, security theater, we have to send a message). | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 679_lf |
broken windows policing | broken windows policing, disproportionate response, even one is too many, judenrein, exemplary punishment, zero-risk bias, zero tolerance | A fallacy of "declaring an 'emergency' and promising to disregard justice and due process and devote unlimited resources (and occasionally, unlimited cruelty) to stamp out a limited, insignificant or even nonexistent problem". A "corrupt and cynical argument from pathos". "Almost always politically driven." A "sinister" form of dog whistle politics. An example of: we have to do something (placebo effect, political theater, security theater, we have to send a message). | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 719_lf |
disproportionate response | broken windows policing, disproportionate response, even one is too many, judenrein, exemplary punishment, zero-risk bias, zero tolerance | A fallacy of "declaring an 'emergency' and promising to disregard justice and due process and devote unlimited resources (and occasionally, unlimited cruelty) to stamp out a limited, insignificant or even nonexistent problem". A "corrupt and cynical argument from pathos". "Almost always politically driven." A "sinister" form of dog whistle politics. An example of: we have to do something (placebo effect, political theater, security theater, we have to send a message). | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 738_lf |
even one is too many | broken windows policing, disproportionate response, even one is too many, judenrein, exemplary punishment, zero-risk bias, zero tolerance | A fallacy of "declaring an 'emergency' and promising to disregard justice and due process and devote unlimited resources (and occasionally, unlimited cruelty) to stamp out a limited, insignificant or even nonexistent problem". A "corrupt and cynical argument from pathos". "Almost always politically driven." A "sinister" form of dog whistle politics. An example of: we have to do something (placebo effect, political theater, security theater, we have to send a message). | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 747_lf |
exemplary punishment | broken windows policing, disproportionate response, even one is too many, judenrein, exemplary punishment, zero-risk bias, zero tolerance | A fallacy of "declaring an 'emergency' and promising to disregard justice and due process and devote unlimited resources (and occasionally, unlimited cruelty) to stamp out a limited, insignificant or even nonexistent problem". A "corrupt and cynical argument from pathos". "Almost always politically driven." A "sinister" form of dog whistle politics. An example of: we have to do something (placebo effect, political theater, security theater, we have to send a message). | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 750_lf |
judenrein | broken windows policing, disproportionate response, even one is too many, judenrein, exemplary punishment, zero-risk bias, zero tolerance | A fallacy of "declaring an 'emergency' and promising to disregard justice and due process and devote unlimited resources (and occasionally, unlimited cruelty) to stamp out a limited, insignificant or even nonexistent problem". A "corrupt and cynical argument from pathos". "Almost always politically driven." A "sinister" form of dog whistle politics. An example of: we have to do something (placebo effect, political theater, security theater, we have to send a message). | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 778_lf |
zero-risk bias | broken windows policing, disproportionate response, even one is too many, judenrein, exemplary punishment, zero-risk bias, zero tolerance | As a cognitive bias, a "preference for reducing a small risk to zero over a greater reduction in a larger risk". A form of: extension neglect. As a logical fallacy, a fallacy of "declaring an 'emergency' and promising to disregard justice and due process and devote unlimited resources (and occasionally, unlimited cruelty) to stamp out a limited, insignificant or even nonexistent problem". A "corrupt and cynical argument from pathos". "Almost always politically driven." A "sinister" form of dog whistle politics. An example of: we have to do something (placebo effect, political theater, security theater, we have to send a message). | [3], [6] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 908_cb_lf |
bribery | bribery, financial incentive, material incentive, material persuasion | A fallacy of obtaining a position through "gifts or favors". Often does not stick unless bribes continue. The reverse of: argumentum ad baculum, appeal to force, argument from the club (stick), argument from force, might-makes-right. See also: appeasement, assertiveness, I know my rights, squeaky wheel gets the grease. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-26 | 510_lf |
financial incentive | bribery, financial incentive, material incentive, material persuasion | A fallacy of obtaining a position through "gifts or favors". Often does not stick unless bribes continue. The reverse of: argumentum ad baculum, appeal to force, argument from the club (stick), argument from force, might-makes-right. See also: appeasement, assertiveness, I know my rights, squeaky wheel gets the grease. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-26 | 760_lf |
material incentive | bribery, financial incentive, material incentive, material persuasion | A fallacy of obtaining a position through "gifts or favors". Often does not stick unless bribes continue. The reverse of: argumentum ad baculum, appeal to force, argument from the club (stick), argument from force, might-makes-right. See also: appeasement, assertiveness, I know my rights, squeaky wheel gets the grease. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-26 | 797_lf |
material persuasion | bribery, financial incentive, material incentive, material persuasion | A fallacy of obtaining a position through "gifts or favors". Often does not stick unless bribes continue. The reverse of: argumentum ad baculum, appeal to force, argument from the club (stick), argument from force, might-makes-right. See also: appeasement, assertiveness, I know my rights, squeaky wheel gets the grease. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-26 | 798_lf |
romantic rebel | brave heretic, conspiracy theories, iconoclastic fallacy, romantic rebel, truthout fallacy, truthdig fallacy | A fallacy of holding a claim as true just because that position "is supposedly standing up heroically to the dominant orthodoxy, the current standard model, conventional wisdom or political correctness, or whatever may be the bandwagon of the moment". A corrupt argument from ethos. The opposite of: bandwagon fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-03 | 616_lf |
brave heretic | brave heretic, conspiracy theories, iconoclastic fallacy, romantic rebel, truthout fallacy, truthdig fallacy | A fallacy of holding a claim as true just because that position "is supposedly standing up heroically to the dominant orthodoxy, the current standard model, conventional wisdom or political correctness, or whatever may be the bandwagon of the moment". A corrupt argument from ethos. The opposite of: bandwagon fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-03 | 718_lf |
conspiracy theories | brave heretic, conspiracy theories, iconoclastic fallacy, romantic rebel, truthout fallacy, truthdig fallacy | A fallacy of holding a claim as true just because that position "is supposedly standing up heroically to the dominant orthodoxy, the current standard model, conventional wisdom or political correctness, or whatever may be the bandwagon of the moment". A corrupt argument from ethos. The opposite of: bandwagon fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-03 | 727_lf |
iconoclastic fallacy | brave heretic, conspiracy theories, iconoclastic fallacy, romantic rebel, truthout fallacy, truthdig fallacy | A fallacy of holding a claim as true just because that position "is supposedly standing up heroically to the dominant orthodoxy, the current standard model, conventional wisdom or political correctness, or whatever may be the bandwagon of the moment". A corrupt argument from ethos. The opposite of: bandwagon fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-03 | 772_lf |
truthdig fallacy | brave heretic, conspiracy theories, iconoclastic fallacy, romantic rebel, truthout fallacy, truthdig fallacy | A fallacy of holding a claim as true just because that position "is supposedly standing up heroically to the dominant orthodoxy, the current standard model, conventional wisdom or political correctness, or whatever may be the bandwagon of the moment". A corrupt argument from ethos. The opposite of: bandwagon fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-03 | 890_lf |
truthout fallacy | brave heretic, conspiracy theories, iconoclastic fallacy, romantic rebel, truthout fallacy, truthdig fallacy | A fallacy of holding a claim as true just because that position "is supposedly standing up heroically to the dominant orthodoxy, the current standard model, conventional wisdom or political correctness, or whatever may be the bandwagon of the moment". A corrupt argument from ethos. The opposite of: bandwagon fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-03 | 891_lf |
brainwashing | brainwashing, propaganda, radicalization | The idea that "an enemy can instantly win over or radicalize an unsuspecting" individual with "vile but...persuasive propaganda" or by "beating an argument into" an a prisoner in coordination with techniques involving harsh treatment or drugs. Generally used in the sense that only the other side can brainwash, while one's own side does not. See also: bribery, love bombing, Stockholm syndrome. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-27 | 068_lf |
propaganda | brainwashing, propaganda, radicalization | The idea that "an enemy can instantly win over or radicalize an unsuspecting" individual with "vile but...persuasive propaganda" or by "beating an argument into" an a prisoner in coordination with techniques involving harsh treatment or drugs. Generally used in the sense that only the other side can brainwash, while one's own side does not. See also: bribery, love bombing, Stockholm syndrome. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-27 | 473_lf |
radicalization | brainwashing, propaganda, radicalization | The idea that "an enemy can instantly win over or radicalize an unsuspecting" individual with "vile but...persuasive propaganda" or by "beating an argument into" an a prisoner in coordination with techniques involving harsh treatment or drugs. Generally used in the sense that only the other side can brainwash, while one's own side does not. See also: bribery, love bombing, Stockholm syndrome. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-27 | 474_lf |
blood of the martyrs fallacy | blood of the martyrs fallacy, waving the bloody shirt | A fallacy holding that "a cause or argument, no matter how questionable or reprehensible, cannot be questioned without dishonoring the blood and sacrifice of those who died so nobly for that cause". An extreme example of: E for effort, I'm trying by best, lost cause. See also: appeal to pity, argument from inertia, cost bias, heroes all, sob story, soldiers' honor fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-03 | 509_lf |
waving the bloody shirt | blood of the martyrs fallacy, waving the bloody shirt | A fallacy holding that "a cause or argument, no matter how questionable or reprehensible, cannot be questioned without dishonoring the blood and sacrifice of those who died so nobly for that cause". An extreme example of: e for effort, I'm trying by best, lost cause. See also: appeal to pity, argument from inertia, cost bias, heroes all, sob story, soldiers' honor fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-03 | 668_lf |
blood is thicker than water | blood is thicker than water, compadrismo, favoritism, for my friends anything | Automatically regarding a claim or action as "true, correct, and above challenge" because "one is related to, knows and likes, or is on the same team or side, or belongs to the same religion, party, club or fraternity as the individual involved". A "corrupt argument from ethos". Reverse of: ad hominem. See also: identity fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 067_lf |
favoritism | blood is thicker than water, compadrismo, favoritism, for my friends anything | Automatically regarding a claim or action as "true, correct, and above challenge" because "one is related to, knows and likes, or is on the same team or side, or belongs to the same religion, party, club or fraternity as the individual involved". A "corrupt argument from ethos". Reverse of: ad hominem. See also: identity fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 439_lf |
for my friends anything | blood is thicker than water, compadrismo, favoritism, for my friends anything | Automatically regarding a claim or action as "true, correct, and above challenge" because "one is related to, knows and likes, or is on the same team or side, or belongs to the same religion, party, club or fraternity as the individual involved". A "corrupt argument from ethos". Reverse of: ad hominem. See also: identity fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 441_lf |
blind loyalty | blind loyalty, blind obedience, Nuremberg defense, team player appeal, unthinking obedience | A fallacy which holds that "an argument or action is right simply and solely because a respected leader or source (a President, expert, one's parents, one's own side, team or country, one's boss or commanding officers) says it is right". A corrupted argument from ethos. See also: big brain little brain fallacy, soldiers' honor fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-03 | 066_lf |
Nuremberg defense | blind loyalty, blind obedience, Nuremberg defense, team player appeal, unthinking obedience | A fallacy which holds that "an argument or action is right simply and solely because a respected leader or source (a President, expert, one's parents, one's own side, team or country, one's boss or commanding officers) says it is right". A corrupted argument from ethos. See also: big brain little brain fallacy, soldiers' honor fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-03 | 372_lf |
blind obedience | blind loyalty, blind obedience, Nuremberg defense, team player appeal, unthinking obedience | A fallacy which holds that "an argument or action is right simply and solely because a respected leader or source (a President, expert, one's parents, one's own side, team or country, one's boss or commanding officers) says it is right". A corrupted argument from ethos. See also: big brain little brain fallacy, soldiers' honor fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-03 | 411_lf |
team player appeal | blind loyalty, blind obedience, Nuremberg defense, team player appeal, unthinking obedience | A fallacy which holds that "an argument or action is right simply and solely because a respected leader or source (a President, expert, one's parents, one's own side, team or country, one's boss or commanding officers) says it is right". A corrupted argument from ethos. See also: big brain little brain fallacy, soldiers' honor fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-03 | 482_lf |
unthinking obedience | blind loyalty, blind obedience, Nuremberg defense, team player appeal, unthinking obedience | A fallacy which holds that "an argument or action is right simply and solely because a respected leader or source (a President, expert, one's parents, one's own side, team or country, one's boss or commanding officers) says it is right". A corrupted argument from ethos. See also: big brain little brain fallacy, soldiers' honor fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-03 | 486_lf |
playing on emotion | bleeding heart, drama queen or drama king fallacy, pathetic fallacy, playing on emotion, sob story | A fallacy in which, ignoring facts, emotion is evoked alone. A fallacy "of pure argument from pathos". The opposite is: apathetic fallacy, burnout, compassion fatigue, cynicism. An obverse is: refinement, real feelings. See also: othering. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 601_lf |
bleeding heart | bleeding heart, drama queen or drama king fallacy, pathetic fallacy, playing on emotion, sob story | A fallacy in which, ignoring facts, emotion is evoked alone. A fallacy "of pure argument from pathos". The opposite is: apathetic fallacy, burnout, compassion fatigue, cynicism. An obverse is: refinement, real feelings. See also: othering. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 714_lf |
drama queen or drama king fallacy | bleeding heart, drama queen or drama king fallacy, pathetic fallacy, playing on emotion, sob story | A fallacy in which, ignoring facts, emotion is evoked alone. A fallacy "of pure argument from pathos". The opposite is: apathetic fallacy, burnout, compassion fatigue, cynicism. An obverse is: refinement, real feelings. See also: othering. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 743_lf |
pathetic fallacy | bleeding heart, drama queen or drama king fallacy, pathetic fallacy, playing on emotion, sob story | A fallacy in which, ignoring facts, emotion is evoked alone. A fallacy "of pure argument from pathos". The opposite is: apathetic fallacy, burnout, compassion fatigue, cynicism. An obverse is: refinement, real feelings. See also: othering. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 824_lf |
sob story | bleeding heart, drama queen or drama king fallacy, pathetic fallacy, playing on emotion, sob story | A fallacy in which, ignoring facts, emotion is evoked alone. A fallacy "of pure argument from pathos". The opposite is: apathetic fallacy, burnout, compassion fatigue, cynicism. An obverse is: refinement, real feelings. See also: othering. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 862_lf |
scapegoating | blamecasting, scapegoating | A fallacy in which there is always someone else to blame than oneself when anything goes wrong. For scapegoating, the blamed entity is typically "other" or marginalized in some way already. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 621_lf |
blamecasting | blamecasting, scapegoating | A fallacy in which there is always someone else to blame than oneself when anything goes wrong. For scapegoating, the blamed entity is typically "other" or marginalized in some way already. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 713_lf |
big lie technique | big lie technique, bold faced lie, staying on message | A fallacy of "repeating a lie, fallacy, slogan, talking-point, nonsense-statement or deceptive half-truth over and over in different forms (particularly in the media) until it becomes part of daily discourse and people accept it without further proof or evidence". Notably, "the bolder and more outlandish the big lie becomes the more credible it seems". See also: alphabet soup, alternative truth; bandwagon fallacy, propaganda, straw man. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-03 | 065_lf |
bold faced lie | big lie technique, bold faced lie, staying on message | A fallacy of "repeating a lie, fallacy, slogan, talking-point, nonsense-statement or deceptive half-truth over and over in different forms (particularly in the media) until it becomes part of daily discourse and people accept it without further proof or evidence". Notably, "the bolder and more outlandish the big lie becomes the more credible it seems". See also: alphabet soup, alternative truth; bandwagon fallacy, propaganda, straw man. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-03 | 412_lf |
staying on message | big lie technique, bold faced lie, staying on message | A fallacy of "repeating a lie, fallacy, slogan, talking-point, nonsense-statement or deceptive half-truth over and over in different forms (particularly in the media) until it becomes part of daily discourse and people accept it without further proof or evidence". Notably, "the bolder and more outlandish the big lie becomes the more credible it seems". See also: alphabet soup, alternative truth; bandwagon fallacy, propaganda, straw man. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-03 | 481_lf |
special pleading | big but fallacy, special pleading | A fallacy of stating "a generally-accepted principle and then directly negating it with a 'but'. Often detailed as a special case "supposedly exempt from the usual rules of law, logic, morality, ethics or even credibility". Closely related to: contradictory premises. A component fallacy. | [1], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 022_lf |
big but fallacy | big but fallacy, special pleading | A fallacy of stating "a generally-accepted principle and then directly negating it with a 'but'. Often detailed as a special case "supposedly exempt from the usual rules of law, logic, morality, ethics or even credibility". Closely related to: contradictory premises. A component fallacy. | [1], [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 506_lf |
big brain little brain | big brain little brain, führerprinzip, mad leader disease | A fallacy in which a person in a leadership or authority position (a work boss, military commander, or some sort of religious, cult, or group leader) tells people to think not with their little brains (the brain in their head) but instead with their big brain (the leader's brain). An "extreme example of the blind loyalty fallacy". Sometimes expressed positively in that the leader takes (moral) responsibilty for decisions. The opposite is: plausible deniability. See also: just do it, gaslighting. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 063_lf |
führerprinzip | big brain little brain, führerprinzip, mad leader disease | A fallacy in which a person in a leadership or authority position (a work boss, military commander, or some sort of religious, cult, or group leader) tells people to think not with their little brains (the brain in their head) but instead with their big brain (the leader's brain). An "extreme example of the blind loyalty fallacy". Sometimes expressed positively in that the leader takes (moral) responsibilty for decisions. The opposite is: plausible deniability. See also: just do it, gaslighting. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 442_lf |
mad leader disease | big brain little brain, führerprinzip, mad leader disease | A fallacy in which a person in a leadership or authority position (a work boss, military commander, or some sort of religious, cult, or group leader) tells people to think not with their little brains (the brain in their head) but instead with their big brain (the leader's brain). An "extreme example of the blind loyalty fallacy". Sometimes expressed positively in that the leader takes (moral) responsibilty for decisions. The opposite is: plausible deniability. See also: just do it, gaslighting. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 459_lf |
all or nothing thinking | bifurcation, black/white fallacy, black and white fallacy, either or fallacy, either/or reasoning, excluded middle, false binary, false dichotomy, false dilemma | A conclusion is reached based on there only being two possible options, when really the possibilities are not so limited. A component fallacy. | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-14 | 374_lf | |
better-than-average effect | better-than-average effect, illusory superiority, Lake Wobegon effect, superiority bias | A "tendency to overestimate one's desirable qualities, and underestimate undesirable qualities, relative to other people". A form of egocentric bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 125_cb |
illusory superiority | better-than-average effect, illusory superiority, Lake Wobegon effect, superiority bias | A "tendency to overestimate one's desirable qualities, and underestimate undesirable qualities, relative to other people". A form of egocentric bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 221_cb |
Lake Wobegon effect | better-than-average effect, illusory superiority, Lake Wobegon effect, superiority bias | A "tendency to overestimate one's desirable qualities, and underestimate undesirable qualities, relative to other people". A form of egocentric bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 234_cb |
superiority bias | better-than-average effect, illusory superiority, Lake Wobegon effect, superiority bias | A "tendency to overestimate one's desirable qualities, and underestimate undesirable qualities, relative to other people". A form of egocentric bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 337_cb |
acquiescence | better the devil you know than the devil you don't, deal with it, default bias, get used to it, if it ain't broke don't fix it, it is what it is, let it be let it be, making one's peace with the situation, normalization of evil, this is the best of all possible worlds, this is the only possible world, whatever is is right | The fallacy that just because something is the current state that is therefore the preferred state. Opposite of: nihilism. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 695_lf |
circular reasoning | begging the question, catch 22, circular reasoning, circulus in probando, petitio principii, vicious circle | A fallacy in which the same proposition appears as a premise and as a conclusion (sometimes worded in two statements appearing differently enough to make this not very obvious); for example, "A, therefore B." and also "B, therefore A". Sometimes, begging the question and circular reasoning are used interchangeably and sometimes with a difference--begging the question or petitio principii more specifically assumes as evidence the conclusion they are trying to prove.) A fallacy of logos. A component fallacy. See also: complex question, big lie technique. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 011_lf |
begging the question | begging the question, catch 22, circular reasoning, circulus in probando, petitio principii, vicious circle | A fallacy in which the same proposition appears as a premise and as a conclusion (sometimes worded in two statements appearing differently enough to make this not very obvious); for example, "A, therefore B." and also "B, therefore A". Sometimes, begging the question and circular reasoning are used interchangeably and sometimes with a difference--begging the question or petitio principii more specifically assumes as evidence the conclusion they are trying to prove.) A fallacy of logos. A component fallacy. See also: complex question, big lie technique. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-03 | 010_lf |
catch 22 | begging the question, catch 22, circular reasoning, circulus in probando, petitio principii, vicious circle | A fallacy in which the same proposition appears as a premise and as a conclusion (sometimes worded in two statements appearing differently enough to make this not very obvious); for example, "A, therefore B." and also "B, therefore A". Sometimes, begging the question and circular reasoning are used interchangeably and sometimes with a difference--begging the question or petitio principii more specifically assumes as evidence the conclusion they are trying to prove.) A fallacy of logos. A component fallacy. See also: complex question, big lie technique. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-03 | 415_lf |
circulus in probando | begging the question, catch 22, circular reasoning, circulus in probando, petitio principii, vicious circle | A fallacy in which the same proposition appears as a premise and as a conclusion (sometimes worded in two statements appearing differently enough to make this not very obvious); for example, "A, therefore B." and also "B, therefore A". Sometimes, begging the question and circular reasoning are used interchangeably and sometimes with a difference--begging the question or petitio principii more specifically assumes as evidence the conclusion they are trying to prove.) A fallacy of logos. A component fallacy. See also: complex question, big lie technique. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 417_lf |
petitio principii | begging the question, catch 22, circular reasoning, circulus in probando, petitio principii, vicious circle | A fallacy in which the same proposition appears as a premise and as a conclusion (sometimes worded in two statements appearing differently enough to make this not very obvious); for example, "A, therefore B." and also "B, therefore A". Sometimes, begging the question and circular reasoning are used interchangeably and sometimes with a difference--begging the question or petitio principii more specifically assumes as evidence the conclusion they are trying to prove.) A fallacy of logos. A component fallacy. See also: complex question, big lie technique. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-03 | 467_lf |
vicious circle | begging the question, catch 22, circular reasoning, circulus in probando, petitio principii, vicious circle | A fallacy in which the same proposition appears as a premise and as a conclusion (sometimes worded in two statements appearing differently enough to make this not very obvious); for example, "A, therefore B." and also "B, therefore A". Sometimes, begging the question and circular reasoning are used interchangeably and sometimes with a difference--begging the question or petitio principii more specifically assumes as evidence the conclusion they are trying to prove.) A fallacy of logos. A component fallacy. See also: complex question, big lie technique. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-03 | 487_lf |
worst negates the bad | be grateful for what you've got, worst negates the bad | A fallacy in which it is claimed that "an objectively bad situation somehow isn't so bad simply because it could have been far worse, or because someone, somewhere has it even worse". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 674_lf |
be grateful for what you've got | be grateful for what you've got, worst negates the bad | A fallacy in which it is claimed that "an objectively bad situation somehow isn't so bad simply because it could have been far worse, or because someone, somewhere has it even worse". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 707_lf |
base rate fallacy | base rate fallacy, base rate neglect | A tendency "to ignore general information and focus on information only pertaining to the specific case, even when the general information is more important". A form of extension neglect. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 121_cb |
base rate neglect | base rate fallacy, base rate neglect | A "tendency to ignore general information and focus on information only pertaining to the specific case, even when the general information is more important". A form of extension neglect. | [6] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 686_cb |
availability bias | availability bias, availability heuristic | Related: hyperbole, magnification, catastrophizing. See also: anchoring bias, attention bias, attentional bias, availability bias, focalism. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 062_lf |
availability bias | availability bias, availability heuristic | A cognitive bias in which one has a greater chance of "recalling recent, nearby, or otherwise immediately available examples", and the assigning of "importance to those examples" over others. Also, "the natural tendency to give undue attention and importance to information that is immediately available at hand, particularly the first or last information received". A fallacy of logos. A memory bias. Related: hyperbole, magnification, catastrophizing. See also: anchoring bias, attention bias, attentional bias, focalism. | [3], [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 114_cb |
availability heuristic | availability bias, availability heuristic | A cognitive bias in which one has a greater chance of "recalling recent, nearby, or otherwise immediately available examples", and the assigning of "importance to those examples" over others. Also, "the natural tendency to give undue attention and importance to information that is immediately available at hand, particularly the first or last information received". A fallacy of logos. A memory bias. Related: hyperbole, magnification, catastrophizing. See also: anchoring bias, attention bias, attentional bias, focalism. | [3], [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 116_cb |
autist's fallacy | autist's fallacy, mind blindness | A fallacy in which normal human capacity for "theory of mind" is entirely denied in which it is held that no one can truly understand or know "another's thoughts, emotions, motivations or intents". The opposite of: mind-reading. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 503_lf |
mind blindness | autist's fallacy, mind blindness | A fallacy in which normal human capacity for "theory of mind" is entirely denied in which it is held that no one can truly understand or know "another's thoughts, emotions, motivations or intents". The opposite of: mind-reading. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 564_lf |
fundamental attribution error | attribution error, fundamental attribution error, self justification | A tendency to assume that others' (poor) behavior results from character defects (personality) while under-emphasizing the influence of the situation on others' behavior, while, at the same time, one's own behavior is held to be due to environmental factors (situtation). A "corrupt argument from ethos". Obverse is: self debasement, self deprecation. See also: group attribution error, ultimate attribution error. | [3], [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-10 | 090_cb_lf |
self justification | attribution error, fundamental attribution error, self justification | A tendency to assume that others' (poor) behavior results from character defects (personality) while under-emphasizing the influence of the situation on others' behavior, while, at the same time, one's own behavior is held to be due to environmental factors (situtation). A "corrupt argument from ethos". Obverse is: self debasement, self deprecation. See also: group attribution error, ultimate attribution error. | [3], [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-10 | 476_lf |
attribution error | attribution error, fundamental attribution error, self justification | A tendency to assume that others' (poor) behavior results from character defects (personality) while under-emphasizing the influence of the situation on others' behavior, while, at the same time, one's own behavior is held to be due to environmental factors (situtation). A "corrupt argument from ethos". Obverse is: self debasement, self deprecation. See also: group attribution error, ultimate attribution error. | [3], [6] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-10 | 705_lf |
attention bias | attentional bias | A tendency for perception to be influenced by thought repetition. See also: anchoring bias, availability bias, availability heuristic, focalism. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 110_cb |
attentional bias | attention bias | A tendency for perception to be influenced by thought repetition. See also: anchoring bias, availability bias, availability heuristic, focalism. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 403_lf |
attacking the evidence | attacking the evidence, missing link fallacy, whataboutery, whataboutism | Incorrectly claiming that "some or all of the key evidence is missing, incomplete, or faked"; or, asking "what about" some false assertion about the veracity or completeness of the evidence or claim presented. See also: appeal to a lack of evidence, appeal to ignorance, argument from ignorance, argumentum ad ignorantiam. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-28 | 054_lf |
whataboutism | attacking the evidence, missing link fallacy, whataboutery, whataboutism | Incorrectly claiming that "some or all of the key evidence is missing, incomplete, or faked"; or, asking "what about" some false assertion about the veracity or completeness of the evidence or claim presented. See also: appeal to a lack of evidence, appeal to ignorance, argument from ignorance, argumentum ad ignorantiam. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-28 | 055_lf |
missing link fallacy | attacking the evidence, missing link fallacy, whataboutery, whataboutism | Incorrectly claiming that "some or all of the key evidence is missing, incomplete, or faked"; or, asking "what about" some false assertion about the veracity or completeness of the evidence or claim presented. See also: appeal to a lack of evidence, appeal to ignorance, argument from ignorance, argumentum ad ignorantiam. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 801_lf |
whataboutery | attacking the evidence, missing link fallacy, whataboutery, whataboutism | Incorrectly claiming that "some or all of the key evidence is missing, incomplete, or faked"; or, asking "what about" some false assertion about the veracity or completeness of the evidence or claim presented. See also: appeal to a lack of evidence, appeal to ignorance, argument from ignorance, argumentum ad ignorantiam. | [3] | 2024-08-28 | 906_lf | |
argument from the negative | argumentum ad ignorantiam | Often interchangeable with Argumentum Ad ignorantiam. A fallacy of omission. | [1] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 030_lf |
argument from silence | argument from silence, argumentum ex silentio | A fallacy in which it is claimed that, just because the currently available knowledge or evidence cannot prove anything about a claim, therefore this in itself proves that status of the claim as true or false (whereas, really, additional evidence or facts could be sought). | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 389_lf |
argumentum ex silentio | argument from silence | A fallacy in which it is claimed that, just because the currently available knowledge or evidence cannot prove anything about a claim, therefore this in itself proves that status of the claim as true or false (whereas, really, additional evidence or facts could be sought). | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 061_lf |
argumentum ad mysteriam | argument from mystery, argumentum ad mysteriam, mystagogy | A fallacy in which some "facts, evidence, practices or arguments" gain weight due to a "quasi-hypnotic effect" that "can often persuade more strongly than any logical argument" derived from special sounds, postures, clothing, rituals, recitations, chants, ancient languages, or other effects introducing a sense of the unknown. Example: long ago and far away. See also: esoteric knowledge. An obverse: standard version fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 060_lf |
argument from mystery | argument from mystery, argumentum ad mysteriam, mystagogy | A fallacy in which some "facts, evidence, practices or arguments" gain weight due to a "quasi-hypnotic effect" that "can often persuade more strongly than any logical argument" derived from special sounds, postures, clothing, rituals, recitations, chants, ancient languages, or other effects introducing a sense of the unknown. Example: long ago and far away. See also: esoteric knowledge. An obverse: standard version fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 387_lf |
mystagogy | argument from mystery, argumentum ad mysteriam, mystagogy | A fallacy in which some "facts, evidence, practices or arguments" gain weight due to a "quasi-hypnotic effect" that "can often persuade more strongly than any logical argument" derived from special sounds, postures, clothing, rituals, recitations, chants, ancient languages, or other effects introducing a sense of the unknown. Example: long ago and far away. See also: esoteric knowledge. An obverse: standard version fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 807_lf |
argument from motives | argument from motives, questioning motives | A fallacy of claiming a point to be false simply on account of improper or evil motives of the person making the claim. See also: moral licensing. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-28 | 501_lf |
questioning motives | argument from motives, questioning motives | A fallacy of claiming a point to be false simply on account of improper or evil motives of the person making the claim. See also: moral licensing. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-28 | 841_lf |
appeal to improper authority | argument from modesty, appeal to authority, appeal to improper authority, argumentum ad verecundium, argument from that which is improper | A fallacy of not "evaluating the...argument on its own merits" and instead simply accepting the conclusion of an individual who may be an expert in a field but whose expertise is unrelated to the argument. A specific form of appeal to improper authority. A subcategory is appeal to biased authority. A fallacy of relevance. | [1], [2] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-21 | 006_lf |
appeal to authority | argument from modesty, appeal to authority, appeal to improper authority, argumentum ad verecundium, argument from that which is improper | A fallacy of not "evaluating the...argument on its own merits" and instead simply accepting the conclusion of an individual who may be an expert in a field but whose expertise is unrelated to the argument. A specific form of appeal to improper authority. A subcategory is appeal to biased authority. A fallacy of relevance. | [1], [2] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-21 | 378_lf |
argument from modesty | argument from modesty, appeal to authority, appeal to improper authority, argumentum ad verecundium, argument from that which is improper | A fallacy of not "evaluating the...argument on its own merits" and instead simply accepting the conclusion of an individual who may be an expert in a field but whose expertise is unrelated to the argument. A specific form of appeal to improper authority. A subcategory is appeal to biased authority. A fallacy of relevance. | [1], [2] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-21 | 386_lf |
argument from that which is improper | argument from modesty, appeal to authority, appeal to improper authority, argumentum ad verecundium, argument from that which is improper | A fallacy of not "evaluating the...argument on its own merits" and instead simply accepting the conclusion of an individual who may be an expert in a field but whose expertise is unrelated to the argument. A specific form of appeal to improper authority. A subcategory is appeal to biased authority. A fallacy of relevance. | [1], [2] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 390_lf |
argumentum ad verecundium | argument from modesty, appeal to authority, appeal to improper authority, argumentum ad verecundium, argument from that which is improper | A fallacy of not "evaluating the...argument on its own merits" and instead simply accepting the conclusion of an individual who may be an expert in a field but whose expertise is unrelated to the argument. A specific form of appeal to improper authority. A subcategory is appeal to biased authority. A fallacy of relevance. | [1], [2] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-21 | 400_lf |
argument from inertia | argument from inertia, stay the course | A believe that "it is necessary to continue on a mistaken course of action regardless of pain and sacrifice involved and even after discovering it is mistaken, because changing course would mean admitting that one's decision (or one's leader, or one's country, or one's faith) was wrong, and all one's effort, expense, sacrifice and even bloodshed was for nothing, and that's unthinkable". A form of: argument from consequences, E for effort, or appeal to tradition. See also: throwing good money after bad. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 057_lf |
stay the course | argument from inertia, stay the course | A believe that "it is necessary to continue on a mistaken course of action regardless of pain and sacrifice involved and even after discovering it is mistaken, because changing course would mean admitting that one's decision (or one's leader, or one's country, or one's faith) was wrong, and all one's effort, expense, sacrifice and even bloodshed was for nothing, and that's unthinkable". A form of: argument from consequences, E for effort, or appeal to tradition. See also: throwing good money after bad. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 480_lf |
argument from personal incredulity | argument from incredulity, argument from personal incredulity | A fallacy of asserting that an argument must not be true just because one personally does not understand it or cannot grasp its technical aspects. A fallacy of relevance. | [1], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-28 | 009_lf |
argument from incredulity | argument from incredulity, argument from personal incredulity | A fallacy of asserting that an argument must not be true just because one personally does not understand it or cannot grasp its technical aspects. | [1], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-28 | 385_lf |
outcome bias | argument from consequences, outcome bias | As a logical fallacy (outcome bias): a fallacy of claiming that something cannot be true because, if it were true, that would be bad or have a negative effect (while in reality the validity of the claim does not actually depend on the positive or negative impact of the claims). A fallacy of relevance. (See also: outcome bias. Do not confuse with: actions have consequences. As a cognitive bias (outcome bias): a fallacy "to judge a decision by its eventual outcome instead of the quality of the decision at the time it was made." | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 268_cb_lf |
argumentum ad populum | argument from common sense, argument to the people, argumentum ad populum, appeal to popular opinion, bandwagon, bandwagon fallacy | A fallacy claiming that something is true because it is believed by most people (or by "everyone," "the people," "the majority" or "someone in power who has widespread backing"). A fallacy of relevance. Sub-approaches can include bandwagon ("everyone's doing it"); patriotic ("it is patriotic"); snob "the best people are doing it"; and covering oneself with the cross ("it's Christian"). Can include: lying with statistics. A modern form is: information cascade. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 003_lf |
appeal to popular opinion | argument from common sense, argument to the people, argumentum ad populum, appeal to popular opinion, bandwagon, bandwagon fallacy | A fallacy claiming that something is true because it is believed by most people (or by "everyone," "the people," "the majority" or "someone in power who has widespread backing"). A fallacy of relevance. Sub-approaches can include bandwagon ("everyone's doing it"); patriotic ("it is patriotic"); snob "the best people are doing it"; and covering oneself with the cross ("it's Christian"). Can include: lying with statistics. A modern form is: information cascade. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 380_lf |
argument from common sense | argument from common sense, argument to the people, argumentum ad populum, appeal to popular opinion, bandwagon, bandwagon fallacy | A fallacy claiming that something is true because it is believed by most people (or by "everyone," "the people," "the majority" or "someone in power who has widespread backing"). A fallacy of relevance. Sub-approaches can include bandwagon ("everyone's doing it"); patriotic ("it is patriotic"); snob "the best people are doing it"; and covering oneself with the cross ("it's Christian"). Can include: lying with statistics. A modern form is: information cascade. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 383_lf |
argument to the people | argument from common sense, argument to the people, argumentum ad populum, appeal to popular opinion, bandwagon, bandwagon fallacy | A fallacy claiming that something is true because it is believed by most people (or by "everyone," "the people," "the majority" or "someone in power who has widespread backing"). A fallacy of relevance. Sub-approaches can include bandwagon ("everyone's doing it"); patriotic ("it is patriotic"); snob "the best people are doing it"; and covering oneself with the cross ("it's Christian"). Can include: lying with statistics. A modern form is: information cascade. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 392_lf |
bandwagon fallacy | argument from common sense, argument to the people, argumentum ad populum, appeal to popular opinion, bandwagon, bandwagon fallacy | A fallacy claiming that something is true because it is believed by most people (or by "everyone," "the people," "the majority" or "someone in power who has widespread backing"). A fallacy of relevance. Sub-approaches can include bandwagon ("everyone's doing it"); patriotic ("it is patriotic"); snob "the best people are doing it"; and covering oneself with the cross ("it's Christian"). Can include: lying with statistics. A modern form is: information cascade. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 406_lf |
bandwagon | argument from common sense, argument to the people, argumentum ad populum, appeal to popular opinion, bandwagon, bandwagon fallacy | A fallacy claiming that something is true because it is believed by most people (or by "everyone," "the people," "the majority" or "someone in power who has widespread backing"). A fallacy of relevance. Sub-approaches can include bandwagon ("everyone's doing it"); patriotic ("it is patriotic"); snob "the best people are doing it"; and covering oneself with the cross ("it's Christian"). Can include: lying with statistics. A modern form is: information cascade. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 706_lf |
argument from adverse consequences | argument from adverse consequences, argument from consequences, outcome bias | A fallacy of claiming that something cannot be true because, if it were true, that would be bad or have a negative effect (while in reality the validity of the claim does not actually depend on the positive or negative impact of the claims). A fallacy of relevance. (See also: outcome bias. Do not confuse with: actions have consequences. | [1], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-28 | 008_lf |
argument from consequences | argument from adverse consequences, argument from consequences, outcome bias | A fallacy of claiming that something cannot be true because, if it were true, that would be bad or have a negative effect (while in reality the validity of the claim does not actually depend on the positive or negative impact of the claims). A fallacy of relevance. (See also: outcome bias. Do not confuse with: actions have consequences. | [1], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-28 | 053_lf |
mala fides | arguing in bad faith, mala fides, sophism | A fallacy of putting forth an argument that the argue knows is invalid. Includes: motivational truth, demagogy, campaign promises, self deception, whistling by the graveyward. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-26 | 559_lf |
arguing in bad faith | arguing in bad faith, mala fides, sophism | A fallacy of putting forth an argument that the argue knows is invalid. Includes: motivational truth, demagogy, campaign promises, self deception, whistling by the graveyward. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-26 | 700_lf |
sophism | arguing in bad faith, mala fides, sophism | A fallacy of putting forth an argument that the argue knows is invalid. Includes: motivational truth, demagogy, campaign promises, self deception, whistling by the graveyward. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-26 | 864_lf |
irrelevant conclusion | arguing beside the point, ignorantio elenchi, ignoring the issue, irrelevant conclusion | A fallacy of switching attention to a different issue (which might be a valid issue but is unrelated to the topic at hand). A component fallacy. Similar to: begging the question. A common form: the red herring. Another example: tu quoque, and you too. | [1], [2] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-26 | 014_lf |
arguing beside the point | arguing beside the point, ignorantio elenchi, ignoring the issue, irrelevant conclusion | A fallacy of switching attention to a different issue (which might be a valid issue but is unrelated to the topic at hand). A component fallacy. Similar to: begging the question. A common form: the red herring. Another example: tu quoque, and you too. | [1], [2] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-26 | 381_lf |
ignorantio elenchi | arguing beside the point, ignorantio elenchi, ignoring the issue, irrelevant conclusion | A fallacy of switching attention to a different issue (which might be a valid issue but is unrelated to the topic at hand). A component fallacy. Similar to: begging the question. A common form: the red herring. Another example: tu quoque, and you too. | [1], [2] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-26 | 450_lf |
ignoring the issue | arguing beside the point, ignorantio elenchi, ignoring the issue, irrelevant conclusion | A fallacy of switching attention to a different issue (which might be a valid issue but is unrelated to the topic at hand). A component fallacy. Similar to: begging the question. A common form: the red herring. Another example: tu quoque, and you too. | [1], [2] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-26 | 451_lf |
squeaky wheel gets the grease | appeasement, assertiveness, i know my rights, squeaky wheel gets the grease | A fallacy of obtaining a result not through argument but through the audience's willingness to give in so that the opposition will simply be satisfied, quieter, or no longer a nuisance. Common in public agencies, education, and retail. Sometimes promoted as a practical, nonviolent way for groups to promote change. See also: bribery. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-26 | 479_lf |
appeasement | appeasement, assertiveness, I know my rights, squeaky wheel gets the grease | A fallacy of obtaining a result not through argument but through the audience's willingness to give in so that the opposition will simply be satisfied, quieter, or no longer a nuisance. Common in public agencies, education, and retail. Sometimes promoted as a practical, nonviolent way for groups to promote change. See also: bribery. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-26 | 052_lf |
assertiveness | appeasement, assertiveness, I know my rights, squeaky wheel gets the grease | A fallacy of obtaining a result not through argument but through the audience's willingness to give in so that the opposition will simply be satisfied, quieter, or no longer a nuisance. Common in public agencies, education, and retail. Sometimes promoted as a practical, nonviolent way for groups to promote change. See also: bribery. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-26 | 401_lf |
I know my rights | appeasement, assertiveness, I know my rights, squeaky wheel gets the grease | A fallacy of obtaining a result not through argument but through the audience's willingness to give in so that the opposition will simply be satisfied, quieter, or no longer a nuisance. Common in public agencies, education, and retail. Sometimes promoted as a practical, nonviolent way for groups to promote change. See also: bribery. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-26 | 449_lf |
appeal to tradition | appeal to tradition, argumentum ad traditionem, argumentum ad antiquitatem, back in those good times, conservative bias, good old days | A fallacy of holding a position as correct or a thing (scenario or deed) as good because it has always been that way or was that way long ago (and might still "serve one particular group very well"). A fallacy of relevance. A "corrupted argument from ethos" (from the past). Often related in time to the audience's young years, but not prior. Opposite of: appeal to novelty, bad old days, early adopter's fallacy, pro-innovation bias, recency bias. | [1], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-26 | 005_lf |
argumentum ad antiquitatem | appeal to tradition, argumentum ad traditionem, argumentum ad antiquitatem, back in those good times, conservative bias, good old days | A fallacy of holding a position as correct or a thing (scenario or deed) as good because it has always been that way or was that way long ago (and might still "serve one particular group very well"). A fallacy of relevance. A "corrupted argument from ethos" (from the past). Often related in time to the audience's young years, but not prior. Opposite of: appeal to novelty, bad old days, early adopter's fallacy, pro-innovation bias, recency bias. | [1], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-26 | 394_lf |
argumentum ad traditionem | appeal to tradition, argumentum ad traditionem, argumentum ad antiquitatem, back in those good times, conservative bias, good old days | A fallacy of holding a position as correct or a thing (scenario or deed) as good because it has always been that way or was that way long ago (and might still "serve one particular group very well"). A fallacy of relevance. A "corrupted argument from ethos" (from the past). Often related in time to the audience's young years, but not prior. Opposite of: appeal to novelty, bad old days, early adopter's fallacy, pro-innovation bias, recency bias. | [1], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-26 | 399_lf |
back in those good times | appeal to tradition, argumentum ad traditionem, argumentum ad antiquitatem, back in those good times, conservative bias, good old days | A fallacy of holding a position as correct or a thing (scenario or deed) as good because it has always been that way or was that way long ago (and might still "serve one particular group very well"). A fallacy of relevance. A "corrupted argument from ethos" (from the past). Often related in time to the audience's young years, but not prior. Opposite of: appeal to novelty, bad old days, early adopter's fallacy, pro-innovation bias, recency bias. | [1], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-26 | 404_lf |
conservative bias | appeal to tradition, argumentum ad traditionem, argumentum ad antiquitatem, back in those good times, conservative bias, good old days | A fallacy of holding a position as correct or a thing (scenario or deed) as good because it has always been that way or was that way long ago (and might still "serve one particular group very well"). A fallacy of relevance. A "corrupted argument from ethos" (from the past). Often related in time to the audience's young years, but not prior. Opposite of: appeal to novelty, bad old days, early adopter's fallacy, pro-innovation bias, recency bias. | [1], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-26 | 422_lf |
good old days | appeal to tradition, argumentum ad traditionem, argumentum ad antiquitatem, back in those good times, conservative bias, good old days | A fallacy of holding a position as correct or a thing (scenario or deed) as good because it has always been that way or was that way long ago (and might still "serve one particular group very well"). A fallacy of relevance. A "corrupted argument from ethos" (from the past). Often related in time to the audience's young years, but not prior. Opposite of: appeal to novelty, bad old days, early adopter's fallacy, pro-innovation bias, recency bias. | [1], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-26 | 444_lf |
so what | appeal to privacy, mind your own business, MYOB, none of yer beeswax, so what, you're not the boss of me | A fallacy of preventing discussion of one's point by "drawing a phony curtian of privacy around oneself and one's actions". A counterpart is: heart of darkness syndrome, I think we're alone now, nobody will ever know, what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-26 | 499_lf |
MYOB | appeal to privacy, mind your own business, MYOB, none of yer beeswax, so what, you're not the boss of me | A fallacy of preventing discussion of one's point by "drawing a phony curtian of privacy around oneself and one's actions". A counterpart is: heart of darkness syndrome, I think we're alone now, nobody will ever know, what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-26 | 565_lf |
appeal to privacy | appeal to privacy, mind your own business, MYOB, none of yer beeswax, so what, you're not the boss of me | A fallacy of preventing discussion of one's point by "drawing a phony curtian of privacy around oneself and one's actions". A counterpart is: heart of darkness syndrome, I think we're alone now, nobody will ever know, what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-26 | 699_lf |
mind your own business | appeal to privacy, mind your own business, MYOB, none of yer beeswax, so what, you're not the boss of me | A fallacy of preventing discussion of one's point by "drawing a phony curtian of privacy around oneself and one's actions". A counterpart is: heart of darkness syndrome, I think we're alone now, nobody will ever know, what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-26 | 800_lf |
none of yer beeswax | appeal to privacy, mind your own business, MYOB, none of yer beeswax, so what, you're not the boss of me | A fallacy of preventing discussion of one's point by "drawing a phony curtian of privacy around oneself and one's actions". A counterpart is: heart of darkness syndrome, I think we're alone now, nobody will ever know, what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-26 | 814_lf |
you're not the boss of me | appeal to privacy, mind your own business, MYOB, none of yer beeswax, so what, you're not the boss of me | A fallacy of preventing discussion of one's point by "drawing a phony curtian of privacy around oneself and one's actions". A counterpart is: heart of darkness syndrome, I think we're alone now, nobody will ever know, what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-26 | 907_lf |
appeal to novelty | appeal to novelty, bad old days, early adopter's fallacy, pro-innovation bias, recency bias | A fallacy that a view or other thing must be correct or better because it is new or recent. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-21 | 051_lf |
recency bias | appeal to novelty, bad old days, early adopter's fallacy, pro-innovation bias, recency bias | A fallacy that a view or other thing must be correct or better because it is new or recent. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-21 | 297_cb |
bad old days | appeal to novelty, bad old days, early adopter's fallacy, pro-innovation bias, recency bias | A fallacy that a view or other thing must be correct or better because it is new or recent. | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-21 | 405_lf | |
early adopter's fallacy | appeal to novelty, bad old days, early adopter's fallacy, pro-innovation bias, recency bias | A fallacy that a view or other thing must be correct or better because it is new or recent. | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-21 | 431_lf | |
pro-innovation bias | appeal to novelty, bad old days, early adopter's fallacy, pro-innovation bias, recency bias | A fallacy that a view or other thing must be correct or better because it is new or recent. | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-21 | 470_lf | |
appeal to nature | appeal to nature, biologizing, green fallacy | A fallacy that just because something is natural, therefore "it has to be good, healthy, and beneficial". A "contemporary romantic fallacy of ethos". See also: argument from natural law. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-23 | 049_lf |
biologizing | appeal to nature, biologizing, green fallacy | A fallacy that just because something is natural, therefore "it has to be good, healthy, and beneficial". A "contemporary romantic fallacy of ethos". See also: argument from natural law. | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-23 | 408_lf | |
green fallacy | appeal to nature, biologizing, green fallacy | A fallacy that just because something is natural, therefore "it has to be good, healthy, and beneficial". A "contemporary romantic fallacy of ethos". See also: argument from natural law. | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-23 | 446_lf | |
American exceptionalism | appeal to heaven, argumentum ad coelum, Deus vult, Gott mit uns, manifest destiny, special covenant | A fallacy based on claiming to know God's mind and wishes, which cannot really be challenged. A "deluded argument from ethos". Opposite of: Job's comforter fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-27 | 377_lf |
appeal to force | appeal to force, argument from force, argument from strength, argument from the club (stick), argumentum ad baculum, bullying, fascism, hard power, might-makes-right, muscular leadership, non-negotiable demands, power-play, resolution by force of arms, shock and awe | A fallacy in which a conclusion is reached due to force, threat of force, or threat of unpleasantness. A fallacy of relevance, since reason for conclusion is not relevant to the argument at hand. | [1], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-03 | 001_lf |
argumentum ad baculum | appeal to force, argument from force, argument from strength, argument from the club (stick), argumentum ad baculum, bullying, fascism, hard power, might-makes-right, muscular leadership, non-negotiable demands, power-play, resolution by force of arms, shock and awe | A fallacy in which a conclusion is reached due to force, threat of force, or threat of unpleasantness. A fallacy of relevance, since reason for conclusion is not relevant to the argument at hand. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-03 | 059_lf |
argument from the club (stick) | appeal to force, argument from force, argument from strength, argument from the club (stick), argumentum ad baculum, bullying, fascism, hard power, might-makes-right, muscular leadership, non-negotiable demands, power-play, resolution by force of arms, shock and awe | A fallacy in which a conclusion is reached due to force, threat of force, or threat of unpleasantness. A fallacy of relevance, since reason for conclusion is not relevant to the argument at hand. | [1], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-03 | 391_lf |
might-makes-right | appeal to force, argument from force, argument from strength, argument from the club (stick), argumentum ad baculum, bullying, fascism, hard power, might-makes-right, muscular leadership, non-negotiable demands, power-play, resolution by force of arms, shock and awe | A fallacy in which a conclusion is reached due to force, threat of force, or threat of unpleasantness. A fallacy of relevance, since reason for conclusion is not relevant to the argument at hand. | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-03 | 461_lf | |
argument from force | appeal to force, argument from force, argument from strength, argument from the club (stick), argumentum ad baculum, bullying, fascism, hard power, might-makes-right, muscular leadership, non-negotiable demands, power-play, resolution by force of arms, shock and awe | A fallacy in which a conclusion is reached due to force, threat of force, or threat of unpleasantness. A fallacy of relevance, since reason for conclusion is not relevant to the argument at hand. | [1]. [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-03 | 701_lf |
argument from strength | appeal to force, argument from force, argument from strength, argument from the club (stick), argumentum ad baculum, bullying, fascism, hard power, might-makes-right, muscular leadership, non-negotiable demands, power-play, resolution by force of arms, shock and awe | A fallacy in which a conclusion is reached due to force, threat of force, or threat of unpleasantness. A fallacy of relevance, since reason for conclusion is not relevant to the argument at hand. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-03 | 702_lf |
bullying | appeal to force, argument from force, argument from strength, argument from the club (stick), argumentum ad baculum, bullying, fascism, hard power, might-makes-right, muscular leadership, non-negotiable demands, power-play, resolution by force of arms, shock and awe | A fallacy in which a conclusion is reached due to force, threat of force, or threat of unpleasantness. A fallacy of relevance, since reason for conclusion is not relevant to the argument at hand. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-03 | 720_lf |
fascism | appeal to force, argument from force, argument from strength, argument from the club (stick), argumentum ad baculum, bullying, fascism, hard power, might-makes-right, muscular leadership, non-negotiable demands, power-play, resolution by force of arms, shock and awe | A fallacy in which a conclusion is reached due to force, threat of force, or threat of unpleasantness. A fallacy of relevance, since reason for conclusion is not relevant to the argument at hand. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-03 | 758_lf |
hard power | appeal to force, argument from force, argument from strength, argument from the club (stick), argumentum ad baculum, bullying, fascism, hard power, might-makes-right, muscular leadership, non-negotiable demands, power-play, resolution by force of arms, shock and awe | A fallacy in which a conclusion is reached due to force, threat of force, or threat of unpleasantness. A fallacy of relevance, since reason for conclusion is not relevant to the argument at hand. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-03 | 766_lf |
muscular leadership | appeal to force, argument from force, argument from strength, argument from the club (stick), argumentum ad baculum, bullying, fascism, hard power, might-makes-right, muscular leadership, non-negotiable demands, power-play, resolution by force of arms, shock and awe | A fallacy in which a conclusion is reached due to force, threat of force, or threat of unpleasantness. A fallacy of relevance, since reason for conclusion is not relevant to the argument at hand. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-03 | 806_lf |
non-negotiable demands | appeal to force, argument from force, argument from strength, argument from the club (stick), argumentum ad baculum, bullying, fascism, hard power, might-makes-right, muscular leadership, non-negotiable demands, power-play, resolution by force of arms, shock and awe | A fallacy in which a conclusion is reached due to force, threat of force, or threat of unpleasantness. A fallacy of relevance, since reason for conclusion is not relevant to the argument at hand. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-03 | 811_lf |
power-play | appeal to force, argument from force, argument from strength, argument from the club (stick), argumentum ad baculum, bullying, fascism, hard power, might-makes-right, muscular leadership, non-negotiable demands, power-play, resolution by force of arms, shock and awe | A fallacy in which a conclusion is reached due to force, threat of force, or threat of unpleasantness. A fallacy of relevance, since reason for conclusion is not relevant to the argument at hand. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-03 | 835_lf |
resolution by force of arms | appeal to force, argument from force, argument from strength, argument from the club (stick), argumentum ad baculum, bullying, fascism, hard power, might-makes-right, muscular leadership, non-negotiable demands, power-play, resolution by force of arms, shock and awe | A fallacy in which a conclusion is reached due to force, threat of force, or threat of unpleasantness. A fallacy of relevance, since reason for conclusion is not relevant to the argument at hand. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-03 | 849_lf |
shock and awe | appeal to force, argument from force, argument from strength, argument from the club (stick), argumentum ad baculum, bullying, fascism, hard power, might-makes-right, muscular leadership, non-negotiable demands, power-play, resolution by force of arms, shock and awe | A fallacy in which a conclusion is reached due to force, threat of force, or threat of unpleasantness. A fallacy of relevance, since reason for conclusion is not relevant to the argument at hand. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-03 | 853_lf |
scare tactics | appeal to fear, bogeyman fallacy, paranoia, scare tactics, shockdoc, shock doctrine, rally 'round the flag, rally 'round the president | A fallacy in which one takes "advantage of a emergent or deliberately-created crisis and its associated public shock, panic and chaos in order to impose an argument, action or solution that would be clearly unacceptable if carefully considered". A "corrupted argument from pathos". A form of playing on emotions. See also: shopping hungry fallacy, dog-whistle politics, we have to do something, worst-case fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 622_lf |
appeal to fear | appeal to fear, bogeyman fallacy, paranoia, scare tactics, shockdoc, shock doctrine, rally 'round the flag, rally 'round the president | A fallacy in which one takes "advantage of a emergent or deliberately-created crisis and its associated public shock, panic and chaos in order to impose an argument, action or solution that would be clearly unacceptable if carefully considered". A "corrupted argument from pathos". A form of playing on emotions. See also: shopping hungry fallacy, dog-whistle politics, we have to do something, worst-case fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 698_lf |
bogeyman fallacy | appeal to fear, bogeyman fallacy, paranoia, scare tactics, shockdoc, shock doctrine, rally 'round the flag, rally 'round the president | A fallacy in which one takes "advantage of a emergent or deliberately-created crisis and its associated public shock, panic and chaos in order to impose an argument, action or solution that would be clearly unacceptable if carefully considered". A "corrupted argument from pathos". A form of playing on emotions. See also: shopping hungry fallacy, dog-whistle politics, we have to do something, worst-case fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 716_lf |
paranoia | appeal to fear, bogeyman fallacy, paranoia, scare tactics, shockdoc, shock doctrine, rally 'round the flag, rally 'round the president | A fallacy in which one takes "advantage of a emergent or deliberately-created crisis and its associated public shock, panic and chaos in order to impose an argument, action or solution that would be clearly unacceptable if carefully considered". A "corrupted argument from pathos". A form of playing on emotions. See also: shopping hungry fallacy, dog-whistle politics, we have to do something, worst-case fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 823_lf |
rally 'round the flag | appeal to fear, bogeyman fallacy, paranoia, scare tactics, shockdoc, shock doctrine, rally 'round the flag, rally 'round the president | A fallacy in which one takes "advantage of a emergent or deliberately-created crisis and its associated public shock, panic and chaos in order to impose an argument, action or solution that would be clearly unacceptable if carefully considered". A "corrupted argument from pathos". A form of playing on emotions. See also: shopping hungry fallacy, dog-whistle politics, we have to do something, worst-case fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 843_lf |
rally 'round the president | appeal to fear, bogeyman fallacy, paranoia, scare tactics, shockdoc, shock doctrine, rally 'round the flag, rally 'round the president | A fallacy in which one takes "advantage of a emergent or deliberately-created crisis and its associated public shock, panic and chaos in order to impose an argument, action or solution that would be clearly unacceptable if carefully considered". A "corrupted argument from pathos". A form of playing on emotions. See also: shopping hungry fallacy, dog-whistle politics, we have to do something, worst-case fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 844_lf |
shock doctrine | appeal to fear, bogeyman fallacy, paranoia, scare tactics, shockdoc, shock doctrine, rally 'round the flag, rally 'round the president | A fallacy in which one takes "advantage of a emergent or deliberately-created crisis and its associated public shock, panic and chaos in order to impose an argument, action or solution that would be clearly unacceptable if carefully considered". A "corrupted argument from pathos". A form of playing on emotions. See also: shopping hungry fallacy, dog-whistle politics, we have to do something, worst-case fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 854_lf |
shockdoc | appeal to fear, bogeyman fallacy, paranoia, scare tactics, shockdoc, shock doctrine, rally 'round the flag, rally 'round the president | A fallacy in which one takes "advantage of a emergent or deliberately-created crisis and its associated public shock, panic and chaos in order to impose an argument, action or solution that would be clearly unacceptable if carefully considered". A "corrupted argument from pathos". A form of playing on emotions. See also: shopping hungry fallacy, dog-whistle politics, we have to do something, worst-case fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 855_lf |
appeal to a lack of evidence | appeal to a lack of evidence, appeal to ignorance, argument from ignorance, argumentum ad ignorantiam | A fallacy using lack of knowledge to arrive at a conclusion. One might might say that because a claim cannot be disproven, therefore the opposite must be true. Or, since we do not know (or cannot know, or cannot prove) something, then it must be true (or false). A fallacy of omission. Includes attacking the evidence, whataboutism, and missing link. See also: a priori argument, appealing to closure, deliberate ignorance, simpleton's fallacy, argumentum ex silentio. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 031_lf |
appeal to ignorance | appeal to a lack of evidence, appeal to ignorance, argument from ignorance, argumentum ad ignorantiam | A fallacy using lack of knowledge to arrive at a conclusion. One might might say that because a claim cannot be disproven, therefore the opposite must be true. Or, since we do not know (or cannot know, or cannot prove) something, then it must be true (or false). A fallacy of omission. Includes attacking the evidence, whataboutism, and missing link. See also: a priori argument, appealing to closure, deliberate ignorance, simpleton's fallacy, argumentum ex silentio. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 379_lf |
argument from ignorance | appeal to a lack of evidence, appeal to ignorance, argument from ignorance, argumentum ad ignorantiam | A fallacy using lack of knowledge to arrive at a conclusion. One might might say that because a claim cannot be disproven, therefore the opposite must be true. Or, since we do not know (or cannot know, or cannot prove) something, then it must be true (or false). A fallacy of omission. Includes attacking the evidence, whataboutism, and missing link. See also: a priori argument, appealing to closure, deliberate ignorance, simpleton's fallacy, argumentum ex silentio. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 384_lf |
argumentum ad ignorantiam | appeal to a lack of evidence, appeal to ignorance, argument from ignorance, argumentum ad ignorantiam | A fallacy using lack of knowledge to arrive at a conclusion. One might might say that because a claim cannot be disproven, therefore the opposite must be true. Or, since we do not know (or cannot know, or cannot prove) something, then it must be true (or false). A fallacy of omission. Includes attacking the evidence, whataboutism, and missing link. See also: a priori argument, appealing to closure, deliberate ignorance, simpleton's fallacy, argumentum ex silentio. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 397_lf |
burnout | apathetic fallacy, compassion fatigue, cynicism | The fallacy in which legitimate arguments are ignored due claimed lack of caring. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-15 | 722_lf |
compassion fatigue | apathetic fallacy, burnout, cynicism | The fallacy in which legitimate arguments are ignored due claimed lack of caring. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-15 | 725_lf |
cynicism | apathetic fallacy, burnout, compassion fatigue | See also: pessimism bias. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-15 | 731_lf |
anthropic bias | anthropic bias, anthropic principle, anthropic selection effect, observation selection effect | The tendency for observations about the universe to only be made when there is someone to observe the data or to do the study. Subforms include: weak anthropic principle (universe fine tuning being the result of survivorship bias), strong anthropic principle (the universe being compleled to have conscious, sapient life), participatory anthropic principle (the universe must be observed to exist), final anthropic principle (informational processing as inherent to universe existence). An example of: selection effect. | [19], [20] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-07 | 069_ |
anthropic principle | anthropic bias, anthropic principle, anthropic selection effect, observation selection effect | The tendency for observations about the universe to only be made when there is someone to observe the data or to do the study. Subforms include: weak anthropic principle (universe fine tuning being the result of survivorship bias), strong anthropic principle (the universe being compleled to have conscious, sapient life), participatory anthropic principle (the universe must be observed to exist), final anthropic principle (informational processing as inherent to universe existence). An example of: selection effect. | [19], [20] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-07 | 507_ |
observation selection effect | anthropic bias, anthropic principle, anthropic selection effect, observation selection effect | The tendency for observations about the universe to only be made when there is someone to observe the data or to do the study. Subforms include: weak anthropic principle (universe fine tuning being the result of survivorship bias), strong anthropic principle (the universe being compleled to have conscious, sapient life), participatory anthropic principle (the universe must be observed to exist), final anthropic principle (informational processing as inherent to universe existence). An example of: selection effect. | [19], [20] | 2024-06-16 | 2024-07-07 | 691_lf |
anthropic selection effect | anthropic bias, anthropic principle, anthropic selection effect | Any bias introduced by the fact of observing from the perspective of an intelligence that has come into existence (for example, ruling out observations that hypothetically might occur but would not be observable by people). Not simply the bias of having only observed some things (e.g., observation selection effects), but the bias only having the opportunity to possibly observe some things by the very nature of the observer's existence itself. | [19] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 514_cb |
appeal to hypocrisy | and you too, appeal to hypocrisy, tu quoque, two wrongs make a right, you also, you do it too | An argument that something is acceptable because the opposition has also done it or an argument that an offered position must be false because the party putting it forth has not always acted in accordance with the position that they put forth. A "corrupt argument form ethos". A form of ad hominem. See also: ego quoque, nos quoque. | [1], [2], [3], [4] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-27 | 033_lf |
you also | and you too, appeal to hypocrisy, tu quoque, two wrongs make a right, you also, you do it too | An argument that something is acceptable because the opposition has also done it or an argument that an offered position must be false because the party putting it forth has not always acted in accordance with the position that they put forth. A "corrupt argument form ethos". A form of ad hominem. See also: ego quoque, nos quoque. | [1], [2], [3], [4] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-27 | 490_lf |
and you too | and you too, appeal to hypocrisy, tu quoque, two wrongs make a right, you also, you do it too | An argument that something is acceptable because the opposition has also done it or an argument that an offered position must be false because the party putting it forth has not always acted in accordance with the position that they put forth. A "corrupt argument form ethos". A form of ad hominem. See also: ego quoque, nos quoque. | [1], [2], [3], [4] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 536_lf |
tu quoque | and you too, appeal to hypocrisy, tu quoque, two wrongs make a right, you also, you do it too | An argument that something is acceptable because the opposition has also done it or an argument that an offered position must be false because the party putting it forth has not always acted in accordance with the position that they put forth. A "corrupt argument form ethos". A form of ad hominem. See also: ego quoque, nos quoque. | [1], [2], [3], [4] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 662_lf |
two wrongs make a right | and you too, appeal to hypocrisy, tu quoque, two wrongs make a right, you also, you do it too | An argument that something is acceptable because the opposition has also done it or an argument that an offered position must be false because the party putting it forth has not always acted in accordance with the position that they put forth. A "corrupt argument form ethos". A form of ad hominem. See also: ego quoque, nos quoque. | [1], [2], [3], [4] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 892_lf |
you do it too | and you too, appeal to hypocrisy, tu quoque, two wrongs make a right, you also, you do it too | An argument that something is acceptable because the opposition has also done it or an argument that an offered position must be false because the party putting it forth has not always acted in accordance with the position that they put forth. A "corrupt argument form ethos". A form of ad hominem. See also: ego quoque, nos quoque. | [1], [2], [3], [4] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 905_lf |
paralysis of analysis | analysis paralysis, nirvana fallacy, paralysis of analysis, procrastination | An argument that since all data is never available, therefore no decision can ever be made and action should always be delayed. A "corruption of...argument from logos". See also: law of unintended consequences. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 594_lf |
nirvana fallacy | analysis paralysis, nirvana fallacy, paralysis of analysis, procrastination | An argument that since all data is never available, therefore no decision can ever be made and action should always be delayed. A "corruption of...argument from logos". See also: law of unintended consequences. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 808_lf |
procrastination | analysis paralysis, nirvana fallacy, paralysis of analysis, procrastination | An argument that since all data is never available, therefore no decision can ever be made and action should always be delayed. A "corruption of...argument from logos". See also: law of unintended consequences. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 837_lf |
analysis paralysis | analysis paralysis, nirvana fallacy, paralysis of analysis, procrastination | An argument that since all data is never available, therefore no decision can ever be made and action should always be delayed. A "corruption of...argument from logos". See also: law of unintended consequences. | [3] | 2024-08-28 | 2024-08-28 | 729_lf |
worst-case fallacy | an abundance of caution, better safe than sorry, better to prevent than to lament, just in case, we can't afford to take chances, worst-case fallacy | A fallacy of pessimism with reasoning based on a far-fetched, unlikely, or even entirely imaginary worst-case scenario isntead of being based on reality. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 675_lf |
an abundance of caution | an abundance of caution, better safe than sorry, better to prevent than to lament, just in case, we can't afford to take chances, worst-case fallacy | A fallacy of pessimism with reasoning based on a far-fetched, unlikely, or even entirely imaginary worst-case scenario isntead of being based on reality. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 697_lf |
better safe than sorry | an abundance of caution, better safe than sorry, better to prevent than to lament, just in case, we can't afford to take chances, worst-case fallacy | A fallacy of pessimism with reasoning based on a far-fetched, unlikely, or even entirely imaginary worst-case scenario isntead of being based on reality. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 709_lf |
better to prevent than to lament | an abundance of caution, better safe than sorry, better to prevent than to lament, just in case, we can't afford to take chances, worst-case fallacy | A fallacy of pessimism with reasoning based on a far-fetched, unlikely, or even entirely imaginary worst-case scenario isntead of being based on reality. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 711_lf |
just in case | an abundance of caution, better safe than sorry, better to prevent than to lament, just in case, we can't afford to take chances, worst-case fallacy | A fallacy of pessimism with reasoning based on a far-fetched, unlikely, or even entirely imaginary worst-case scenario isntead of being based on reality. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 780_lf |
we can't afford to take chances | an abundance of caution, better safe than sorry, better to prevent than to lament, just in case, we can't afford to take chances, worst-case fallacy | A fallacy of pessimism with reasoning based on a far-fetched, unlikely, or even entirely imaginary worst-case scenario isntead of being based on reality. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 897_lf |
alternative truth | alt facts, alternate facts, alternative truth, counterknowledge, disinformation, information pollution | A fallacy holding that objective facts and truth cannot really exist, are not durable, or are really subjective. A "fallacy of logos rooted in postmodernism". Related to: big lie technique. See also: gaslighting, blind loyalty, big brain little brain fallacy, two truths. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 046_lf |
alt facts | alt facts, alternate facts, alternative truth, counterknowledge, disinformation, information pollution | A fallacy holding that objective facts and truth cannot really exist, are not durable, or are really subjective. A "fallacy of logos rooted in postmodernism". Related to: big lie technique. See also: gaslighting, blind loyalty, big brain little brain fallacy, two truths. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 375_lf |
alternate facts | alt facts, alternate facts, alternative truth, counterknowledge, disinformation, information pollution | A fallacy holding that objective facts and truth cannot really exist, are not durable, or are really subjective. A "fallacy of logos rooted in postmodernism". Related to: big lie technique. See also: gaslighting, blind loyalty, big brain little brain fallacy, two truths. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 376_lf |
counterknowledge | alt facts, alternate facts, alternative truth, counterknowledge, disinformation, information pollution | A fallacy holding that objective facts and truth cannot really exist, are not durable, or are really subjective. A "fallacy of logos rooted in postmodernism". Related to: big lie technique. See also: gaslighting, blind loyalty, big brain little brain fallacy, two truths. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 424_lf |
disinformation | alt facts, alternate facts, alternative truth, counterknowledge, disinformation, information pollution | A fallacy holding that objective facts and truth cannot really exist, are not durable, or are really subjective. A "fallacy of logos rooted in postmodernism". Related to: big lie technique. See also: gaslighting, blind loyalty, big brain little brain fallacy, two truths. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 430_lf |
information pollution | alt facts, alternate facts, alternative truth, counterknowledge, disinformation, information pollution | A fallacy holding that objective facts and truth cannot really exist, are not durable, or are really subjective. A "fallacy of logos rooted in postmodernism". Related to: big lie technique. See also: gaslighting, blind loyalty, big brain little brain fallacy, two truths. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 452_lf |
bad-boy talk | alpha-male talk, locker-room talk | A form of "frank, unguarded or uninhibited offensive expression". A fallacy that holds that some words are excempt from criticism because they are simply the true expression of some perspective having merit due to their representing the uncensored expression of true feelings. See also: venting. See also: affective fallacy. Opposite to this are political correctness and scripted message. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-14 | 504_lf |
locker-room talk | alpha-male talk, bad-boy talk | A form of "frank, unguarded or uninhibited offensive expression". A fallacy that holds that some words are excempt from criticism because they are simply the true expression of some perspective having merit due to their representing the uncensored expression of true feelings. See also: venting. See also: affective fallacy. Opposite to this are political correctness and scripted message. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-14 | 552_lf |
changing the rules | all's fair in love and war, moving the goalposts, nuclear option, winning isn't everything it's the only thing | Starting with certain requirements for a decision, then, when, the criteria are met, requiring a higher bar. "A fallacy of logos". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-14 | 513_lf |
moving the goalposts | all's fair in love and war, changing the rules, nuclear option, winning isn't everything it's the only thing | Starting with certain requirements for a decision, then, when, the criteria are met, requiring a higher bar. "A fallacy of logos". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-14 | 574_lf |
nuclear option | all's fair in love and war, changing the rules, moving the goalposts, winning isn't everything it's the only thing | Starting with certain requirements for a decision, then, when, the criteria are met, requiring a higher bar. "A fallacy of logos". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-14 | 586_lf |
winning isn't everything it's the only thing | all's fair in love and war, changing the rules, moving the goalposts, nuclear option | Starting with certain requirements for a decision, then, when, the criteria are met, requiring a higher bar. "A fallacy of logos". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-14 | 672_lf |
bifurcation | all or nothing thinking, black and white fallacy, black/white fallacy, either or fallacy, either/or reasoning, excluded middle, false binary, false dichotomy, false dilemma | A conclusion is reached based on there only being two possible options, when really the possibilities are not so limited. A component fallacy. | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-14 | 407_lf | |
black and white fallacy | all or nothing thinking, bifurcation, black/white fallacy, either or fallacy, either/or reasoning, excluded middle, false binary, false dichotomy, false dilemma | A conclusion is reached based on there only being two possible options, when really the possibilities are not so limited. A component fallacy. | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-14 | 409_lf | |
black/white fallacy | all or nothing thinking, bifurcation, black and white fallacy, either or fallacy, either/or reasoning, excluded middle, false binary, false dichotomy, false dilemma | A conclusion is reached based on there only being two possible options, when really the possibilities are not so limited. A component fallacy. | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-14 | 410_lf | |
either or fallacy | all or nothing thinking, bifurcation, black and white fallacy, black/white fallacy, either/or reasoning, excluded middle, false binary, false dichotomy, false dilemma | A conclusion is reached based on there only being two possible options, when really the possibilities are not so limited. A component fallacy. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-14 | 018_lf |
either/or reasoning | all or nothing thinking, bifurcation, black and white fallacy, black/white fallacy, either/or reasoning, excluded middle, false binary, false dichotomy, false dilemma | A conclusion is reached based on there only being two possible options, when really the possibilities are not so limited. A component fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-14 | 524_lf |
false binary | all or nothing thinking, bifurcation, black and white fallacy, black/white fallacy, either or fallacy, either/or reasoning, excluded middle, false binary, false dilemma | A conclusion is reached based on there only being two possible options, when really the possibilities are not so limited. A component fallacy. | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-14 | 436_lf | |
false dichotomy | all or nothing thinking, bifurcation, black and white fallacy, black/white fallacy, either or fallacy, either/or reasoning, excluded middle, false binary, false dilemma | A conclusion is reached based on there only being two possible options, when really the possibilities are not so limited. A component fallacy. | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-14 | 437_lf | |
false dilemma | all or nothing thinking, bifurcation, black and white fallacy, black/white fallacy, either or fallacy, either/or reasoning, excluded middle, false binary, false dilemma | A conclusion is reached based on there only being two possible options, when really the possibilities are not so limited. A component fallacy. | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-14 | 438_lf | |
excluded middle | all or nothing thinking, bifurcation, black and white fallacy, black/white fallacy, either or fallacy, either/or reasoning, excluded middle, false binary, false dichotomy, false dilemma | If a little is good, then more must be better. Or, if less is good, then none is better. "A corrupted argument from logos". One opposite is excluded outliers. Another opposite is middle of the road fallacy (falacia ad temperantiam, the politics of the center, marginalization of the adversary). A conclusion is reached based on there only being two possible options, when really the possibilities are not so limited. A component fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-09-05 | 085_lf |
too much of a coincidence | after this therefore because of this, clustering illusion, post hoc argument, post hoc propter hoc, post hoc ergo propter hoc, too much of a coincidence | A mistaken conclusion that one event must have been caused by a specific earlier event. Example of: correlation implies causation, cum hoc ergo propter hoc, coincidental correlation, false cause, false cause and effect, non causa pro causa, not the cause for the cause. | [3], [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 034_lf |
clustering illusion | after this therefore because of this, clustering illusion, post hoc argument, post hoc propter hoc, post hoc ergo propter hoc, too much of a coincidence | A mistaken conclusion that one event must have been caused by a specific earlier event. Example of: correlation implies causation, cum hoc ergo propter hoc, coincidental correlation, false cause, false cause and effect, non causa pro causa, not the cause for the cause. | [3], [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 133_cb_lf |
post hoc argument | after this therefore because of this, clustering illusion, post hoc argument, post hoc propter hoc, post hoc ergo propter hoc, too much of a coincidence | A mistaken conclusion that one event must have been caused by a specific earlier event. Example of: correlation implies causation, cum hoc ergo propter hoc, coincidental correlation, false cause, false cause and effect, non causa pro causa, not the cause for the cause. | [1], [2], [4] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-26 | 606_lf |
post hoc ergo propter hoc | after this therefore because of this, clustering illusion, post hoc argument, post hoc propter hoc, post hoc ergo propter hoc, too much of a coincidence | A mistaken conclusion that one event must have been caused by a specific earlier event. Example of: correlation implies causation, cum hoc ergo propter hoc, coincidental correlation, false cause, false cause and effect, non causa pro causa, not the cause for the cause. | [1], [2], [4] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-26 | 832_lf |
post hoc propter hoc | after this therefore because of this, clustering illusion, post hoc argument, post hoc propter hoc, post hoc ergo propter hoc, too much of a coincidence | A mistaken conclusion that one event must have been caused by a specific earlier event. Example of: correlation implies causation, cum hoc ergo propter hoc, coincidental correlation, false cause, false cause and effect, non causa pro causa, not the cause for the cause. | [1], [2], [4] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-26 | 833_lf |
after this therefore because of this | after this therefore because of this, clustering illusion, post hoc argument, post hoc propter hoc, post hoc ergo propter hoc, too much of a coincidence | A mistaken conclusion that one event must have been caused by a specific earlier event. Example of: correlation implies causation, cum hoc ergo propter hoc, coincidental correlation, false cause, false cause and effect, non causa pro causa, not the cause for the cause. | [1], [2], [4] | 2024-08-26 | 2024-08-28 | 790_lf |
appeal to emotion | affective fallacy, appeal to emotion, appeal to pity, argument from pity, argumentum ad misericordiam, emotion over reflection, follow your heart, playing to emotions, romantic fallacy | "An emotional appeal to what should be a logical issue". "Opposite to this is...chosen emotion fallacy. Often, "a fallacy of encouragement to root of the underdog regardless of the issues at hand". "A corrupt argument from pathos." A fallacy of relevance. Closely related to angelism. "Opposite to this is...chosen emotion fallacy." Opposite of: appeal to rigor. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-24 | 007_lf |
appeal to pity | affective fallacy, appeal to emotion, appeal to pity, argument from pity, argumentum ad misericordiam, emotion over reflection, follow your heart, playing to emotions, romantic fallacy | "An emotional appeal to what should be a logical issue". "Opposite to this is...chosen emotion fallacy. Often, "a fallacy of encouragement to root of the underdog regardless of the issues at hand". "A corrupt argument from pathos." A fallacy of relevance. Closely related to angelism. "Opposite to this is...chosen emotion fallacy." Opposite of: appeal to rigor. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-24 | 050_lf |
playing to emotions | affective fallacy, appeal to emotion, appeal to pity, argument from pity, argumentum ad misericordiam, emotion over reflection, follow your heart, playing to emotions, romantic fallacy | "An emotional appeal to what should be a logical issue". "Opposite to this is...chosen emotion fallacy. Often, "a fallacy of encouragement to root of the underdog regardless of the issues at hand". "A corrupt argument from pathos." A fallacy of relevance. Closely related to angelism. "Opposite to this is...chosen emotion fallacy." Opposite of: appeal to rigor. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-24 | 106_cb |
affective fallacy | affective fallacy, appeal to emotion, appeal to pity, argument from pity, argumentum ad misericordiam, emotion over reflection, follow your heart, playing to emotions, romantic fallacy | "An emotional appeal to what should be a logical issue". "Opposite to this is...chosen emotion fallacy. Often, "a fallacy of encouragement to root of the underdog regardless of the issues at hand". "A corrupt argument from pathos." A fallacy of relevance. Closely related to angelism. "Opposite to this is...chosen emotion fallacy." Opposite of: appeal to rigor. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-24 | 373_lf |
argument from pity | affective fallacy, appeal to emotion, appeal to pity, argument from pity, argumentum ad misericordiam, emotion over reflection, follow your heart, playing to emotions, romantic fallacy | "An emotional appeal to what should be a logical issue". "Opposite to this is...chosen emotion fallacy. Often, "a fallacy of encouragement to root of the underdog regardless of the issues at hand". "A corrupt argument from pathos." A fallacy of relevance. Closely related to angelism. "Opposite to this is...chosen emotion fallacy." Opposite of: appeal to rigor. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-24 | 388_lf |
emotion over reflection | affective fallacy, appeal to emotion, appeal to pity, argument from pity, argumentum ad misericordiam, emotion over reflection, follow your heart, playing to emotions, romantic fallacy | "An emotional appeal to what should be a logical issue". "Opposite to this is...chosen emotion fallacy. Often, "a fallacy of encouragement to root of the underdog regardless of the issues at hand". "A corrupt argument from pathos." A fallacy of relevance. Closely related to angelism. "Opposite to this is...chosen emotion fallacy." Opposite of: appeal to rigor. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-24 | 432_lf |
romantic fallacy | affective fallacy, appeal to emotion, appeal to pity, argument from pity, argumentum ad misericordiam, emotion over reflection, follow your heart, playing to emotions, romantic fallacy | "An emotional appeal to what should be a logical issue". "Opposite to this is...chosen emotion fallacy. Often, "a fallacy of encouragement to root of the underdog regardless of the issues at hand". "A corrupt argument from pathos." A fallacy of relevance. Closely related to angelism. "Opposite to this is...chosen emotion fallacy." Opposite of: appeal to rigor. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-24 | 475_lf |
argumentum ad misericordiam | affective fallacy, appeal to emotion, appeal to pity, argument from pity, argumentum ad misericordiam, emotion over reflection, follow your heart, playing to emotions, romantic | "An emotional appeal to what should be a logical issue". "Opposite to this is...chosen emotion fallacy. Often, "a fallacy of encouragement to root of the underdog regardless of the issues at hand". "A corrupt argument from pathos." A fallacy of relevance. Closely related to angelism. "Opposite to this is...chosen emotion fallacy." Opposite of: appeal to rigor. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-24 | 398_lf |
follow your heart | affective fallacy, appeal to emotion, appeal to pity, argument from pity, argumentum ad misericordiam, emotion over reflection, follow your heart, playing to emotions, romantic | "An emotional appeal to what should be a logical issue". "Opposite to this is...chosen emotion fallacy. Often, "a fallacy of encouragement to root of the underdog regardless of the issues at hand". "A corrupt argument from pathos." A fallacy of relevance. Closely related to angelism. "Opposite to this is...chosen emotion fallacy." Opposite of: appeal to rigor. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-24 | 440_lf |
personal attack | ad hominem argument, argumentum ad hominem, argument toward the man, attacking the person, personal attack, poisoning the well | Arguing against the opposing party instead of the reasoning given by the opposing party. This might question the intelligence, credentials, or character of the opposition. A "corrupted negative argument from ethos". Subcategories include abusive and circumstantial types. A fallacy of relevance. The opposite of star power. An obverse is token endorsement. See also: guilt by association. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 002_lf |
argument toward the man | ad hominem argument, argumentum ad hominem, argument toward the man, attacking the person, personal attack, poisoning the well | Arguing against the opposing party instead of the reasoning given by the opposing party. This might question the intelligence, credentials, or character of the opposition. A "corrupted negative argument from ethos". Subcategories include abusive and circumstantial types. A fallacy of relevance. The opposite of star power. An obverse is token endorsement. See also: guilt by association. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 393_lf |
argumentum ad hominem | ad hominem argument, argumentum ad hominem, argument toward the man, attacking the person, personal attack, poisoning the well | Arguing against the opposing party instead of the reasoning given by the opposing party. This might question the intelligence, credentials, or character of the opposition. A "corrupted negative argument from ethos". Subcategories include abusive and circumstantial types. A fallacy of relevance. The opposite of star power. An obverse is token endorsement. See also: guilt by association. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 396_lf |
attacking the person | ad hominem argument, argumentum ad hominem, argument toward the man, attacking the person, personal attack, poisoning the well | Arguing against the opposing party instead of the reasoning given by the opposing party. This might question the intelligence, credentials, or character of the opposition. A "corrupted negative argument from ethos". Subcategories include abusive and circumstantial types. A fallacy of relevance. The opposite of star power. An obverse is token endorsement. See also: guilt by association. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 402_lf |
poisoning the well | ad hominem argument, argumentum ad hominem, argument toward the man, attacking the person, personal attack, poisoning the well | Arguing against the opposing party instead of the reasoning given by the opposing party. This might question the intelligence, credentials, or character of the opposition. A "corrupted negative argument from ethos". Subcategories include abusive and circumstantial types. A fallacy of relevance. The opposite of star power. An obverse is token endorsement. See also: guilt by association. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 468_lf |
ad hominem argument | ad hominem argument, argumentum ad hominem, argument toward the man, attacking the person, personal attack, poisoning the well | Arguing against the opposing party instead of the reasoning given by the opposing party. This might question the intelligence, credentials, or character of the opposition. A "corrupted negative argument from ethos". Subcategories include abusive and circumstantial types. A fallacy of relevance. The opposite of star power. An obverse is token endorsement. See also: guilt by association. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-26 | 495_lf |
reductio ad Hitlerum | ad Hitlerum | An example of ad hominem or guilt by association that invokes a specific extreme persona from history. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-13 | 611_lf |
default bias | acquiescence, better the devil you know than the devil you don't, deal with it, default bias, get used to it, if it ain't broke don't fix it, it is what it is, let it be let it be, making one's peace with the situation, normalization of evil, this is the best of all possible worlds, whatever is is right | The fallacy that just because something is the current state that is therefore the preferred state. Opposite of: nihilism. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 073_lf |
this is the best of all possible worlds | acquiescence, better the devil you know than the devil you don't, deal with it, default bias, get used to it, if it ain't broke don't fix it, it is what it is, let it be let it be, making one's peace with the situation, normalization of evil, this is the best of all possible worlds, whatever is is right | The fallacy that just because something is the current state that is therefore the preferred state. Opposite of: nihilism. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 491_lf |
it is what it is | acquiescence, better the devil you know than the devil you don't, deal with it, default bias, get used to it, if it ain't broke don't fix it, it is what it is, let it be let it be, making one's peace with the situation, normalization of evil, this is the best of all possible worlds, whatever is is right | The fallacy that just because something is the current state that is therefore the preferred state. Opposite of: nihilism. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 544_lf |
better the devil you know than the devil you don't | acquiescence, better the devil you know than the devil you don't, deal with it, default bias, get used to it, if it ain't broke don't fix it, it is what it is, let it be let it be, making one's peace with the situation, normalization of evil, this is the best of all possible worlds, whatever is is right | The fallacy that just because something is the current state that is therefore the preferred state. Opposite of: nihilism. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 710_lf |
deal with it | acquiescence, better the devil you know than the devil you don't, deal with it, default bias, get used to it, if it ain't broke don't fix it, it is what it is, let it be let it be, making one's peace with the situation, normalization of evil, this is the best of all possible worlds, whatever is is right | The fallacy that just because something is the current state that is therefore the preferred state. Opposite of: nihilism. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 733_lf |
get used to it | acquiescence, better the devil you know than the devil you don't, deal with it, default bias, get used to it, if it ain't broke don't fix it, it is what it is, let it be let it be, making one's peace with the situation, normalization of evil, this is the best of all possible worlds, whatever is is right | The fallacy that just because something is the current state that is therefore the preferred state. Opposite of: nihilism. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 762_lf |
if it ain't broke don't fix it | acquiescence, better the devil you know than the devil you don't, deal with it, default bias, get used to it, if it ain't broke don't fix it, it is what it is, let it be let it be, making one's peace with the situation, normalization of evil, this is the best of all possible worlds, whatever is is right | The fallacy that just because something is the current state that is therefore the preferred state. Opposite of: nihilism. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 774_lf |
let it be let it be | acquiescence, better the devil you know than the devil you don't, deal with it, default bias, get used to it, if it ain't broke don't fix it, it is what it is, let it be let it be, making one's peace with the situation, normalization of evil, this is the best of all possible worlds, whatever is is right | The fallacy that just because something is the current state that is therefore the preferred state. Opposite of: nihilism. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 787_lf |
making one's peace with the situation | acquiescence, better the devil you know than the devil you don't, deal with it, default bias, get used to it, if it ain't broke don't fix it, it is what it is, let it be let it be, making one's peace with the situation, normalization of evil, this is the best of all possible worlds, whatever is is right | The fallacy that just because something is the current state that is therefore the preferred state. Opposite of: nihilism. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 794_lf |
normalization of evil | acquiescence, better the devil you know than the devil you don't, deal with it, default bias, get used to it, if it ain't broke don't fix it, it is what it is, let it be let it be, making one's peace with the situation, normalization of evil, this is the best of all possible worlds, whatever is is right | The fallacy that just because something is the current state that is therefore the preferred state. Opposite of: nihilism. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 816_lf |
whatever is is right | acquiescence, better the devil you know than the devil you don't, deal with it, default bias, get used to it, if it ain't broke don't fix it, it is what it is, let it be let it be, making one's peace with the situation, normalization of evil, this is the best of all possible worlds, this is the only possible world | The fallacy that just because something is the current state that is therefore the preferred state. Opposite of: nihilism. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 703_lf |
by any means necessary | accomplish the mission, find a way, I don't care how you do it, just do it | An argumentum ad baculum (argument from force) that implies arriving at an outcome by setting aside morality. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-29 | 723_lf |
find a way | accomplish the mission, by any means necessary, just do it, I don't care how you do it | An argumentum ad baculum (argument from force) that implies arriving at an outcome by setting aside morality. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-29 | 909_lf |
I don't care how you do it | accomplish the mission, by any means necessary, find a way, just do it | An argumentum ad baculum (argument from force) that implies arriving at an outcome by setting aside morality. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-29 | 683_lf |
just do it | accomplish the mission, by any means necessary, find a way, I don't care how you do it | An argumentum ad baculum (argument from force) that implies arriving at an outcome by setting aside morality. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-29 | 546_lf |
a dicto simpliciter ad dictum secundum quid | accident, a dicto simpliciter ad dictum secundum quid | A fallacy in which "an acceptable exception is ignored". A form of: secundum quid, secundum quid et simpliciter | [32] | 2024-08-26 | 2024-08-28 | 779_lf |
accident | accident, a dicto simpliciter ad dictum secundum quid | A fallacy in which "an acceptable exception is ignored". A form of: secundum quid, secundum quid et simpliciter. | [32] | 2024-08-26 | 2024-08-28 | 761_lf |
proof texting | a priori argument, proof texting, rationalization | A given pre-conceived conclusion is determined from the start, then any argument is sought to support it. Reasoning "from what is before" without observation or experience. Deciding that some claim is true and then "searching for any reasonable or reasonable-sounding argument to rationalize, defend or justify it". A "corrupt arguent form logos". Opposite of: taboo. See also: argument from ignorance. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 838_lf |
rationalization | a priori argument, proof texting, rationalization | A given pre-conceived conclusion is determined from the start, then any argument is sought to support it. Reasoning "from what is before" without observation or experience. Deciding that some claim is true and then "searching for any reasonable or reasonable-sounding argument to rationalize, defend or justify it". A "corrupt arguent form logos". Opposite of: taboo. See also: argument from ignorance. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 845_lf |
a man's gotta do what a man's gotta do | a person's got to do what a person's got to do, a woman's got to do what a woman's got to do, I've got to do what I've got to do | This fallacy draws a conclusion based on (potentially prejudiced identity or gender-based) feelings or emotion not necessarily having a foundation in logical reasoning (e.g., it is possible that they do not really have to arrive at that outcome). A form of the affective fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-14 | 693_lf |
a woman's got to do what a woman's got to do | a person's got to do what a person's got to do, a woman's got to do what a woman's got to do, I've got to do what I've got to do | This fallacy draws a conclusion based on (potentially prejudiced identity or gender-based) feelings or emotion not necessarily having a foundation in logical reasoning (e.g., it is possible that they do not really have to arrive at that outcome). A form of the affective fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-14 | 2024-07-02 | 911_lf |
a person's got to do what a person's got to do | a person's got to do what a person's got to do, a man's got to do what a man's got to do, a woman's got to do what a woman's got to do, I've got to do what I've got to do | This fallacy draws a conclusion based on (potentially prejudiced identity or gender-based) feelings or emotion not necessarily having a foundation in logical reasoning (e.g., it is possible that they do not really have to arrive at that outcome). A form of the affective fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-14 | 2024-07-02 | 910_lf |
I've got to do what I've got to do | a person's got to do what a person's got to do, a man's got to do what a man's got to do, I've got to do what I've got to do | This fallacy draws a conclusion based on (potentially prejudiced identity or gender-based) feelings or emotion not necessarily having a foundation in logical reasoning (e.g., it is possible that they do not really have to arrive at that outcome). A form of the affective fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-14 | 2024-07-02 | 912_lf |
hasty generalization | a dicto secundum quid ad dictum simpliciter, converse accident, destroying the exception, dicto simpliciter, hasty generalization, jumping to conclusions, reverse accident | Literally, "a dicto secundum quid ad dictum simpliciter" means "from a qualified statement to a simple statement"; the shorter "dictum simpliciter" means "simple statement". A fallacy in which "a rule that applies only to an exceptional case is wrongly applied to all cases in general". Also, "mistaken use of inductive reasoning when there are too few samples to prove a point." A common example is the misleading statistic, a statistic seems compelling the way it is presented, but a fuller picture would show otherwise. A component fallacy. See also: ignoring qualifications, secundum quid, secundum quid et simpliciter, sweeping generalization. | [1], [2], [31], [32] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-28 | 012_lf |
converse accident | a dicto secundum quid ad dictum simpliciter, converse accident, destroying the exception, dicto simpliciter, hasty generalization, jumping to conclusions, reverse accident | Literally, "a dicto secundum quid ad dictum simpliciter" means "from a qualified statement to a simple statement"; the shorter "dictum simpliciter" means "simple statement". A fallacy in which "a rule that applies only to an exceptional case is wrongly applied to all cases in general". Also, "mistaken use of inductive reasoning when there are too few samples to prove a point." A common example is the misleading statistic, a statistic seems compelling the way it is presented, but a fuller picture would show otherwise. A component fallacy. See also: ignoring qualifications, secundum quid, secundum quid et simpliciter, sweeping generalization. | [1], [2], [31], [32] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-28 | 423_lf |
dicto simpliciter | a dicto secundum quid ad dictum simpliciter, converse accident, destroying the exception, dicto simpliciter, hasty generalization, jumping to conclusions, reverse accident | Literally, "a dicto secundum quid ad dictum simpliciter" means "from a qualified statement to a simple statement"; the shorter "dictum simpliciter" means "simple statement". A fallacy in which "a rule that applies only to an exceptional case is wrongly applied to all cases in general". Also, "mistaken use of inductive reasoning when there are too few samples to prove a point." A common example is the misleading statistic, a statistic seems compelling the way it is presented, but a fuller picture would show otherwise. A component fallacy. See also: ignoring qualifications, secundum quid, secundum quid et simpliciter, sweeping generalization. | [1], [2], [31], [32] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-28 | 429_lf |
jumping to conclusions | a dicto secundum quid ad dictum simpliciter, converse accident, destroying the exception, dicto simpliciter, hasty generalization, jumping to conclusions, reverse accident | Literally, "a dicto secundum quid ad dictum simpliciter" means "from a qualified statement to a simple statement"; the shorter "dictum simpliciter" means "simple statement". A fallacy in which "a rule that applies only to an exceptional case is wrongly applied to all cases in general". Also, "mistaken use of inductive reasoning when there are too few samples to prove a point." A common example is the misleading statistic, a statistic seems compelling the way it is presented, but a fuller picture would show otherwise. A component fallacy. See also: ignoring qualifications, secundum quid, secundum quid et simpliciter, sweeping generalization. | [1], [2], [31], [32] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-28 | 456_lf |
destroying the exception | a dicto secundum quid ad dictum simpliciter, converse accident, destroying the exception, dicto simpliciter, hasty generalization, jumping to conclusions, reverse accident | Literally, "a dicto secundum quid ad dictum simpliciter" means "from a qualified statement to a simple statement"; the shorter "dictum simpliciter" means "simple statement". A fallacy in which "a rule that applies only to an exceptional case is wrongly applied to all cases in general". Also, "mistaken use of inductive reasoning when there are too few samples to prove a point." A common example is the misleading statistic, a statistic seems compelling the way it is presented, but a fuller picture would show otherwise. A component fallacy. See also: ignoring qualifications, secundum quid, secundum quid et simpliciter, sweeping generalization. | [1], [2], [31], [32] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 533_lf |
reverse accident | a dicto secundum quid ad dictum simpliciter, converse accident, destroying the exception, dicto simpliciter, hasty generalization, jumping to conclusions, reverse accident | Literally, "a dicto secundum quid ad dictum simpliciter" means "from a qualified statement to a simple statement"; the shorter "dictum simpliciter" means "simple statement". A fallacy in which "a rule that applies only to an exceptional case is wrongly applied to all cases in general". Also, "mistaken use of inductive reasoning when there are too few samples to prove a point." A common example is the misleading statistic, a statistic seems compelling the way it is presented, but a fuller picture would show otherwise. A component fallacy. See also: ignoring qualifications, secundum quid, secundum quid et simpliciter, sweeping generalization. | [1], [2], [31], [32] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 558_lf |
a dicto secundum quid ad dictum simpliciter | a dicto secundum quid ad dictum simpliciter, converse accident, destroying the exception, dicto simpliciter, hasty generalization, jumping to conclusions, reverse accident | Literally, "a dicto secundum quid ad dictum simpliciter" means "from a qualified statement to a simple statement"; the shorter "dictum simpliciter" means "simple statement". A fallacy in which "a rule that applies only to an exceptional case is wrongly applied to all cases in general". Also, "mistaken use of inductive reasoning when there are too few samples to prove a point." A common example is the misleading statistic, a statistic seems compelling the way it is presented, but a fuller picture would show otherwise. A component fallacy. See also: ignoring qualifications, secundum quid, secundum quid et simpliciter, sweeping generalization. | [1], [2], [31], [32] | 2024-08-26 | 2024-08-28 | 735_lf |
Pollyanna principle | Pollyanna principle, projection bias, singing kumbaya, they're just like us | An automatic and false assumption that everybody in some group context shares "basically the same (positive) wishes, desires, interests, concerns, ethics and moral code". A "fallacy of ethos". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 604_lf |
singing kumbaya | Pollyanna principle, projection bias, singing kumbaya, they're just like us | An automatic and false assumption that everybody in some group context shares "basically the same (positive) wishes, desires, interests, concerns, ethics and moral code". A "fallacy of ethos". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 859_lf |
they're just like us | Pollyanna principle, projection bias, singing kumbaya, they're just like us | An automatic and false assumption that everybody in some group context shares "basically the same (positive) wishes, desires, interests, concerns, ethics and moral code". A "fallacy of ethos". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 881_lf |
risk compensation | Peltzman effect, risk compensation | A tendency to "take greater risks when perceived safety increases". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 305_cb |
Peltzman effect | Peltzman effect, risk compensation | A tendency to "take greater risks when perceived safety increases". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 306_cb |
Job's comforter fallacy | Job's comforter fallacy, karma is a bi**h, what goes around comes around | An argument that there is no random chance, and that one's own misfortunes must be punishment for sins or wickedness. Opposite of: appeal to heaven. See also: magical thinking. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 493_lf |
karma is a bi**h | Job's comforter fallacy, karma is a bi**h, what goes around comes around | An argument that there is no random chance, and that one's own misfortunes must be punishment for sins or wickedness. Opposite of: appeal to heaven. See also: magical thinking. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 781_lf |
what goes around comes around | Job's comforter fallacy, karma is a bi**h, what goes around comes around | An argument that there is no random chance, and that one's own misfortunes must be punishment for sins or wickedness. Opposite of: appeal to heaven. See also: magical thinking. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 899_lf |
naturalistic fallacy | G.E. Moore's naturalistic fallacy, naturalistic fallacy | A fallacy of inferring "that X is good from any proposition about X’s natural properties". Different than: "argument from nature", "the appeal to nature". | [25] | 2024-08-28 | 901_lf | |
G.E. Moore's naturalistic fallacy | G.E. Moore's naturalistic fallacy, naturalistic fallacy | A fallacy of inferring "that X is good from any proposition about X’s natural properties". Different than: "argument from nature", "the appeal to nature". | [25] | 2024-07-11 | 2024-08-28 | 883_lf |
procrustean fallacy | Fordism, keeping up standards, procrustean fallacy, standardization, uniformity | The inappropriate application "the norms and requirements of standardized manufacturing. quality control and rigid scheduling, or of military discipline to inherently diverse free human beings, their lives, education, behavior, clothing and appearance". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 609_lf |
Fordism | Fordism, keeping up standards, procrustean fallacy, standardization, uniformity | The inappropriate application "the norms and requirements of standardized manufacturing. quality control and rigid scheduling, or of military discipline to inherently diverse free human beings, their lives, education, behavior, clothing and appearance". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 680_lf |
keeping up standards | Fordism, keeping up standards, procrustean fallacy, standardization, uniformity | Fordism, keeping up standards, procrustean fallacy, standardization, uniformity | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 784_lf |
standardization | Fordism, keeping up standards, procrustean fallacy, standardization, uniformity | The inappropriate application "the norms and requirements of standardized manufacturing. quality control and rigid scheduling, or of military discipline to inherently diverse free human beings, their lives, education, behavior, clothing and appearance". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 866_lf |
uniformity | Fordism, keeping up standards, procrustean fallacy, standardization, uniformity | The inappropriate application "the norms and requirements of standardized manufacturing. quality control and rigid scheduling, or of military discipline to inherently diverse free human beings, their lives, education, behavior, clothing and appearance". | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 895_lf |
E for effort | E for effort, noble effort, I'm trying my best, lost cause | The idea that something must be good or true because someone has put a lot of good-faith effort or sacrifice into it. A "fallacy6 of ethos". An example is: waving the bloody shirt, the blood of the martyrs fallacy. See also: argument from inertia, cost bias, solider's honor fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-28 | 080_lf |
I'm trying my best | E for effort, noble effort, I'm trying my best, lost cause | The idea that something must be good or true because someone has put a lot of good-faith effort or sacrifice into it. A "fallacy6 of ethos". An example is: waving the bloody shirt, the blood of the martyrs fallacy. See also: argument from inertia, cost bias, solider's honor fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 688_lf |
lost cause | E for effort, noble effort, I'm trying my best, lost cause | The idea that something must be good or true because someone has put a lot of good-faith effort or sacrifice into it. A "fallacy6 of ethos". An example is: waving the bloody shirt, the blood of the martyrs fallacy. See also: argument from inertia, cost bias, solider's honor fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 792_lf |
noble effort | E for effort, noble effort, I'm trying my best, lost cause | The idea that something must be good or true because someone has put a lot of good-faith effort or sacrifice into it. A "fallacy6 of ethos". An example is: waving the bloody shirt, the blood of the martyrs fallacy. See also: argument from inertia, cost bias, solider's honor fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-28 | 810_lf |
Barnum effect | Barnum effect, Forer effect | A tendency "for individuals to give high accuracy ratings to descriptions of their personality that supposedly are tailored specifically for them, but are in fact vague and general enough to apply to a wide range of people". A form of egocentric bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 120_cb |
Forer effect | Barnum effect, Forer effect | A tendency "for individuals to give high accuracy ratings to descriptions of their personality that supposedly are tailored specifically for them, but are in fact vague and general enough to apply to a wide range of people". A form of egocentric bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-09 | 181_cb |
Baader–Meinhof phenomenon | Baader–Meinhof phenomenon, frequency illusion | A cognitive bias in which "once something has been noticed, then every instance of that thing is noticed, leading to the belief it has a high frequency of occurrence". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 117_cb |
frequency illusion | Baader–Meinhof phenomenon, frequency illusion | A cognitive bias in which "once something has been noticed, then every instance of that thing is noticed, leading to the belief it has a high frequency of occurrence". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 184_cb |
appeal to heaven | American exceptionalism, argumentum ad coelum, Deus vult, Gott mit uns, manifest destiny, special covenant | A fallacy based on claiming to know God's mind and wishes, which cannot really be challenged. A "deluded argument from ethos". Opposite of: Job's comforter fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-27 | 048_lf |
Deus vult | American exceptionalism, appeal to heaven, argumentum ad coelum, Gott mit uns, manifest destiny, special covenant | A fallacy based on claiming to know God's mind and wishes, which cannot really be challenged. A "deluded argument from ethos". Opposite of: Job's comforter fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-27 | 428_lf |
Gott mit uns | American exceptionalism, appeal to heaven, argumentum ad coelum, Deus vult, manifest destiny, special covenant | A fallacy based on claiming to know God's mind and wishes, which cannot really be challenged. A "deluded argument from ethos". Opposite of: Job's comforter fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-27 | 445_lf |
manifest destiny | American exceptionalism, appeal to heaven, argumentum ad coelum, Deus vult, Gott mit uns, special covenant | A fallacy based on claiming to know God's mind and wishes, which cannot really be challenged. A "deluded argument from ethos". Opposite of: Job's comforter fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-27 | 460_lf |
special covenant | American exceptionalism, appeal to heaven, argumentum ad coelum, Deus vult, Gott mit uns, manifest destiny | A fallacy based on claiming to know God's mind and wishes, which cannot really be challenged. A "deluded argument from ethos". Opposite of: Job's comforter fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-27 | 478_lf |
argumentum ad coelum | American exceptionalism, appeal to heaven, Deus vult, Gott mit uns, manifest destiny, special covenant | A fallacy based on claiming to know God's mind and wishes, which cannot really be challenged. A "deluded argument from ethos". Opposite of: Job's comforter fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-27 | 395_lf |
genetic fallacy | A fallacy of claiming something as untrustworthy due to its "racial, geographic, or ethnic origin". A fallacy of relevance. Related to ad hominem, personal attack. | [1] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-21 | 004_lf | |
faulty analogy | A component fallacy. | [1] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-11 | 019_lf | |
undistributed middle term | A component fallacy. | [1] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-11 | 020_lf | |
contradictory premises | Closely related to Special Pleading. A component fallacy. | [1] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-11 | 021_lf | |
equivocation | A fallacy of ambiguity. | [1] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-11 | 023_lf | |
amphiboly | Literally, "indeterminate". A fallacy in which a conclusion relies on interpreting a sentence to mean one thing, when the inclusion of that sentence as a premise was intended to mean something else. Possible because some sentences can be read multiple ways with different meanings depending on word usage. A fallacy of ambiguity. Compare with: equivocation. | [1] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-05 | 024_lf | |
composition | A fallacy of ambiguity. The opposite of divison. | [1] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-03 | 025_lf | |
division | A fallacy of ambiguity. The opposite of composition. | [1], [2] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-28 | 026_lf | |
no true Scotsman | A fallacy of omission. | [1] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-11 | 029_lf | |
equivocation | A fallacy of "knowingly and deliberately using words in a different sense than the one the audience will understand" or "deliberately failing to define one's terms" or for "the same term...using differing meanings" or "using a word in a different way than the author used it in the original premise" or "changing definitions halfway through a discussion". A fallacy of ambiguity. Compare with: amphiboly. | [1], [2], [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-05 | 037_lf | |
appeal to biased authority | A fallacy of simply accepting the conclusion of an individual who may be an expert in a field but "who may have professional or personal motivations that render his professional judgement suspect". A specific form of appeal to improper authority. | [1] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-21 | 038_lf | |
actions have consequences | An incorrect assertion (based on some kind of rules) that a punishment for an occurrance is instead a consequence." A corrupt argument from ethos." (Procedures invoked by a third party may result in eventual punishment, but that outcome is not accurately a direct or necessary consequence of the initial event.) See also: blaming the victim. Opposite of: moral licensing. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-27 | 041_lf | |
token endorsement | Fallacy saying that a positive statement made by an individual with a pertinent characteristic must be true because of their possession of that characteristic. For example, a claim that, just because a member of a minority group states that a person of the majority group is not bigoted against the minority group, that this must therefore be true. (It is still possible for the statement to be incorrect, despite the group membership of the person making the statement.) | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-13 | 042_lf | |
angelism | A fallacy of "falsely claiming that one is capable of objective reasoning and judgment without emotion". In other words, "falsely claiming for oneself a viewpoint of...disinterested objectivity or pretending to place onself far above all...bias." Related to affective fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-21 | 043_lf | |
chosen emotion fallacy | A fallacy in which "one falsely claims complete, or at least reliable prior voluntary control over one's own autonomic, gut level affective reactions". Related to but distinct from: angelism. Opposite to: affective fallacy, appeal to emotion, appeal to pity, argument from pity, argumentum ad misericordiam, emotion over reflection, follow your heart, playing to emotions, romantic fallacy. See also: mortification. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-05 | 044_lf | |
alphabet soup | The use of jargon such as acronyms, initialisms, and abbreviations consisting of letters (and possibly numbers) to impress, to build rapport, to confuse, or to obfuscate, ultimately resulting in loss of communication regarding what is being said or why an argument would be valid, and instead relying on potentially invalid shortcuts to reach a conclusion. See also: name calling. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-14 | 045_lf | |
appeal to closure | See also Appeal to a Lack of Evidence, Argument From Adverse Consequences. Opposite of Paralysis of Analysis. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-11 | 047_lf | |
missing link | See also: appeal to a lack of evidence, appeal to ignorance, argumentum ad ignorantiam, argument from ignorance. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 056_lf | |
the argument from motives | See too Questioning Motives. A kind of ad hominem. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-11 | 058_lf | |
cost bias | A fallacy in which an expensive thing is regarded more highly than a free or inexpensive thing, "regardless of the item's real quality, utility, or true value to the purchaser". "A fallacy of ethos (that of a product)." | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-05 | 072_lf | |
disciplinary blinders | See also Star Power, Two Truths. Analogous to Denominational Blinders. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-11 | 076_lf | |
Dunning-Kruger effect | A cognitive bias and logical fallacy in which "people of limited skills or knowledge mistakenly believe their abilities are greater than they actually are". Clarifying notes: "Dunning and Kruger themselves never claimed to show that the unskilled think they're better than the skilled." "Also, there is a positive correlation between actual performance and perceived performance." | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-05 | 079_cb_lf | |
eschatological fallacy | A fallacy that argues that "the world is coming to an end" so therefore some position is reasonable. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-05 | 081_lf | |
essentializing | A fallacy of treating a thing such that it is and can only ever be that which it is said to be at its core. A "fallacy of logos". Opposite of: relativizing. See also: red herring, Appeal to Nature. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 083_lf | |
false analogy | Opposite of Sui Generis Fallacy, Difference. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-11 | 087_lf | |
finish the job | Related to Just a Job. See also Blind Loyalty, Soldiers Honor Fallacy, Argument from Inertia. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-11 | 088_lf | |
free speech fallacy | An example is the Safe Space or Safe Place. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-11 | 089_lf | |
gaslighting | A fallacy of "denying or invalidating a person's own knowledge and experiences by deliberately twisting or distorting known facts, memories, scenes, events and evidence in order to disorient a vulnerable opponent and to make him or her doubt his/her sanity". An example is: emotional invalidation. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-05 | 091_lf | |
emotional invalidation | A fallacy of "questioning, after the fact, the reality or validity of affective [emotional] states, either another's or one's own". An example of: gaslighting. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-05 | 092_lf | |
Hoyle's fallacy | The false assumption that a low-probablility event could never have happened or will never happen. An obverse: you can't win if you don't play, someone's going to win and it might as well be you. | [3] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-05 | 097_lf | |
action bias | A tendency to act even when there is no problem or when no action would be more effective for the given problem. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-13 | 098_cb | |
actor-observer bias | A tendency for the description of an actor's behavior to over-emphasize the observer's personality (while under-emphasizing the actor's scenario). Also, the opposite--a tendency for an actor's description of their own behavior to have the reverse pattern: over-emphasizing their own scenario while under-emphasizing the effect of their own personality. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-13 | 099_cb | |
additive bias | A tendency to solve problems by adding things (for example, instead of by removing things). | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-13 | 100_cb | |
agent detection bias | A tendency to assume that an actor is intentionally intervening in a scenario. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-13 | 101_cb | |
ambiguity effect | A tendency to avoid options with outcomes that have unknown probabilities. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-14 | 102_cb | |
anthropocentric thinking | A tendency to use analogies about humans when describing other systems. An availability bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-14 | 104_cb | |
anthropomorphism | A tendency to describe non-human things as having human traits. An availability bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-14 | 105_cb | |
apophenia | A "tendency to perceive meaningful connections between unrelated things". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-06-21 | 107_cb | |
association fallacy | A cognitive bias and formal logical fallacy in which it is asserted that "properties of one thing must also be properties of another thing, if both things belong to the same group". A social bias. Includes: authority bias, cheerleader effect, halo effect. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 108_cb_lf | |
assumed similarity bias | A cognitive bias in which one "assumes that others have more traits in common with them than those others actually do". A social bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 109_cb | |
attribute substitution | A cognitive bias in which "a judgment has to be made (of a target attribute) that is computationally complex, and instead a more easily calculated heuristic attribute is substituted" in which the substitution is thought to take place automatically instead of with self-awarene reflection. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 111_cb | |
authority bias | A tendency to "attribute greater accuracy to the opinion of an authority figure (unrelated to its content) and be more influenced by that opinion". A social bias. A form of association fallacy. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 112_cb | |
automation bias | A bias in which ones depends too much on automated systems that "can lead to erroneous automated information overriding correct decisions". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 113_cb | |
availability cascade | A cognitive bias consisting of "a self-reinforcing process in which a collective belief gains more and more plausibility through its increasing repetition in public discourse". A conformity bias. A social bias. See also: availability heuristic. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 115_cb | |
backfire effect | A cognitive bias in which one strengthens a prior (e.g., current) belief when coming across evidence to the contrary. (The "disconfirming evidence" has the opposite of its logical effect on the belief-holder.) A form of confirmation bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 118_cb | |
bandwagon effect | A cognitive bias in which people tend "do (or believe) things because many other people do (or believe) the same". See also: groupthink and herd behavior as concepts in social psychology. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 119_cb | |
belief bias | An "effect where someone's evaluation of the logical strength of an argument is biased by the believability of the conclusion". Categorized as a truth judgement bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 122_cb | |
Ben Franklin effect | An bias in which "a person who has performed a favor for someone is more likely to do another favor for that person than they would be if they had received a favor from that person". Bias category: cognitive dissonance. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-11 | 123_cb | |
Berkson's paradox | A "tendency to misinterpret statistical experiments involving conditional probabilities". Categorized as a cognitive bias and a logical fallacy. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 124_cb_lf | |
bias blind spot | A "tendency to see oneself as less biased than other people, or to be able to identify more cognitive biases in others than in oneself." A form of egocentric bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 126_cb | |
bizarreness effect | A bias in which "bizarre material is better remembered than common material". A form of memory bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 127_cb | |
boundary extension | A tendency to remember an image's background as "larger or more expansive" compared with the foreground. A memory bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-03 | 128_cb | |
cheerleader effect | A tendency " for people to appear more attractive in a group than in isolation". A social bias. A form of association fallacy. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-05 | 129_cb | |
childhood amnesia | The tendency to retain few memories from before the age of four. A memory bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-05 | 130_cb | |
chronological snobbery | A tendency to consider something (like an idea or argument) from an earlier time as less valid than newer concept on the (not necessarliy true) basis that people in the past were less intelligent. A from of appeal to novelty. | [6], [18] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-05 | 132_cb_lf | |
cognitive dissonance | Theoretically, bias results when "people continually reduce their" "mental disturbance...when...beliefs and actions are inconsistent and contradictory..." "in order to align their cognitions (perceptions of the world) with their actions". The concept is said to be comprised of 1) the bias of feeling one does not have baises, 2) the bias in which one feels better, smarter, or more moral than average, and 3) confirmation bias. | [6], [17] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-27 | 134_cb | |
common source bias | A tendency "to combine or compare research studies from the same source, or from sources that use the same methodologies or data". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-05 | 135_cb | |
compassion fade | A tendency to "behave more compassionately towards a small number of identifiable victims than to a large number of anonymous ones". A bias of extension neglect. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-05 | 136_cb | |
large-sample bias | A tendency for a model based on large samples of data to under-represent, or not represent, valid and important components that only appeared in a small portion of the sampled data. | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-07 | 137_ | ||
conformity | A tendency to fit in regardless of logic. Forms of conformity bias include: availabilty cascade, bandwagon effect, courtesy bias, groupthink, groupshift, social desirabiltyy bias, truth bias/ | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-06 | 138_cb | |
congruence bias | A tendency "to test hypotheses exclusively through direct testing, instead of testing possible alternative hypotheses". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-06 | 139_cb | |
conjunction fallacy | A tendency to "assume that specific conditions are more probable than a more general version of those same conditions". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-06 | 140_cb | |
context effect | The tendency for "out-of-context memories" to be "mopre difficult to retrieve than in-context memories". A memory bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-07 | 142_cb | |
context neglect bias | A tendency to "neglect the human context of technological challenges". A framing effect bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-07 | 143_cb | |
continued influence effect | A tendency for misinformation to "influence memory and reasoning about an event, despite the misinformation having been corrected". See also: misinformation effect. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-07 | 144_cb | |
contrast effect | The "enhancement or reduction of a certain stimulus's perception when compared with a recently observed, contrasting object". An example of: framing effect. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-07 | 145_cb | |
courtesy bias | The tendency to "give an opinion that is more socially correct than one's true opinion, so as to avoid offending anyone". An example of: conformity. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-07 | 146_cb | |
cross-race effect | The tendency "for people of one race to have difficulty identifying members of a race other than their own". An example of: memory bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-07 | 147_cb | |
cryptomnesia | The tendency in which "a memory is mistaken for novel thought or imagination, because there is no subjective experience of it being a memory". An example of: misattribution of memory. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-07 | 148_cb | |
curse of knowledge | A tendency in whcih "better-informed people find it extremely difficult to think about problems from the perspective of lesser-informed people". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-07 | 149_cb | |
declinism | A "predisposition to view the past favorably...and future negatively". See also: rosy retrospection. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-07 | 152_cb | |
decoy effect | A phenomenon in which "preferences for either option A or B change in favor of option B when option C is presented, which is completely dominated by option B (inferior in all respects) and partially dominated by option A". An example of: framing effect. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-07 | 153_cb | |
default effect | A tendency "to favor the default option when given a choice between several options". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-07 | 154_cb | |
defensive attribution hypothesis | A tendency to "attribute more blame to a harm-doer as the outcome becomes more severe or as personal or situational similarity to the victim increases". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-07 | 155_cb | |
denomination effect | A tendency "to spend more money when it is denominated in small amounts (e.g., coins) rather than large amounts (e.g., bills)". An example of: framing effect. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-07 | 156_cb | |
disposition effect | A tendency "sell an asset that has accumulated in value and resist selling an asset that has declined in value". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-09 | 157_cb | |
distinction bias | A tendency to "view two options as more dissimilar when evaluating them simultaneously than when evaluating them separately". An example of: framing effect. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-09 | 158_cb | |
domain neglect bias | A trendency "neglect relevant domain knowledge while solving interdisciplinary problems". An example of: framing effect. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-09 | 159_cb | |
dread aversion | The tendency for dread to "double the emotional impact of savouring". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-09 | 160_cb | |
duration neglect | The "neglect of the duration of an episode in determining its value". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-06 | 162_cb | |
effort justification | A tendency to "attribute greater value to an outcome if they had to put effort into achieving it". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-09 | 164_cb | |
egocentric bias | A "tendency to rely too heavily on one's own perspective and/or have a different perception of oneself relative to others". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 165_cb | |
end-of-history illusion | A an "age-independent" tendency to "believe that one will change less in the future than one has in the past". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-09 | 166_cb | |
endowment effect | A tendency "for people to demand much more to give up an object than they would be willing to pay to acquire it". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-09 | 167_cb | |
euphoric recall | A tendency to "remember past experiences in a positive light, while overlooking negative experiences associated with that even". A type of: memory bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-09 | 169_cb | |
exaggerated expectation | A tendency to "expect or predict more extreme outcomes than those outcomes that actually happen". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-09 | 170_cb | |
extension neglect | A senario in which "the quantity of the sample size is not sufficiently taken into consideration when assessing the outcome, relevance or judgement". Examples include: base rate fallacy, compassion fade, conjunction fallacy, duration neglect, hyperbolic discounting, insensitivity to sample size, less-is-better effect, neglect of probability, scope insensitivity, scope neglect, zero-risk bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-09 | 173_cb | |
extrinsic incentives bias | A scenario in which "people view others as having (situational) extrinsic motivations and (dispositional) intrinsic motivations for oneself". An exception to: fundamental attribution error. A form of: attribution bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-09 | 174_cb | |
fading affect bias | A tendency in which "the emotion associated with unpleasant memories fades more quickly than the emotion associated with positive events". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-09 | 175_cb | |
false consensus effect | A tendency to "overestimate the degree to which others agree with them". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-09 | 176_cb | |
false memory | A scenarion in which "imagination is mistaken for a memory". A form of: misattribution of memory. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-09 | 177_cb | |
false priors | A scenarion in which "initial beliefs and knowledge ... interfere with the unbiased evaluation of factual evidence and lead to incorrect conclusions". Examples include: agent detection bias, automation bias, gender bias, sexual overperception bias, stereotyping. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-09 | 178_cb | |
false uniqueness bias | A tendency people have to "see their projects and themselves as more singular than they actually are". A form of: egocentric bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-09 | 179_cb | |
form function attribution bias | A tendnecy of people "to make systematic errors when interacting with a robot""based on its appearance (form)". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-09 | 182_cb | |
framing effect | The tendency to "draw different conclusions from the same information, depending on how that information is presented". Examples include: contrast effect, decoy effect, default effect, denomination effect, distinction bias, domain neglect bias, context neglect bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-07 | 183_cb | |
functional fixedness | A tendenency "limiting a person to using an object only in the way it is traditionally used". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-09 | 185_cb | |
fundamental pain bias | A tendency "for people to believe they accurately report their own pain levels while holding the paradoxical belief that others exaggerate it". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-10 | 187_cb | |
G. I. Joe fallacy | A tendency to "think that knowing about cognitive bias is enough to overcome it". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-10 | 188_cb | |
gambler's fallacy | A tendency to "think that future probabilities are altered by past events, when in reality they are unchanged". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-10 | 189_cb | |
gender bias | A "set of implicit biases that discriminate against a gender". Examples: "the assumption that women are less suited to jobs requiring high intellectual ability" and "the assumption that people or animals are male in the absence of any indicators of gender". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-10 | 190_cb | |
gender differences in eyewitness memory | A tendency "for a witness to remember more details about someone of the same gender". A memory bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-10 | 191_cb | |
Google effect | A tendency to "forget information that can be found readily online by using Internet search engines". A memory bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-10 | 194_cb | |
group attribution error | A tendency to believe that "the characteristics of an individual group member are reflective of the group as a whole" or to "assume that group decision outcomes reflect the preferences of group members" "even when information is available that clearly suggests otherwise". Example of: attribution bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-10 | 195_cb | |
groupshift | A tendency "for decisions to be more risk-seeking or risk-averse than the group as a whole, if the group is already biased in that direction". Example of: conformity. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-10 | 197_cb | |
groupthink | A tendency in which "the desire for harmony or conformity in the group results in an irrational or dysfunctional decision-making outcome" as people "try to minimize conflict and reach a consensus decision without critical evaluation of alternative viewpoints by actively suppressing dissenting viewpoints, and by isolating themselves from outside influences". Example of: conformity. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-10 | 198_cb | |
halo effect | A social bias. A form of association fallacy. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 199_cb | |
hard–easy effect | A tendency "to overestimate one's ability to accomplish hard tasks, and underestimate one's ability to accomplish easy tasks". Category of bias: self-assessment. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-10 | 200_cb | |
hedonic recall bias | A tendency "for people who are satisfied with their wage to overestimate how much they earn, and vice versa, for people who are unsatisfied with their wage to underestimate it". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-10 | 201_cb | |
herd behavior | A tendency of "individuals in a group acting collectively without centralized direction". | [6], [24] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-11 | 202_cb | |
hostile attribution bias | A tendency to "interpret others' behaviors as having hostile intent, even when the behavior is ambiguous or benign". A form of: attribution bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-11 | 206_cb | |
hot-cold empathy gap | A tendency to "underestimate the influence of visceral drives on one's attitudes, preferences, and behaviors". Bias category: self-assessment. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-11 | 207_cb | |
humor effect | A tendency for "humorous items" to be "more easily remembered than non-humorous ones". A form of: memory bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-11 | 211_cb | |
greedflation fallacy | A mistaken belief that "corporate greed causes inflation". A fallacy surrounding: capitalism. | [27] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-15 | 213_lf | |
IKEA effect | A tendency "for people to place a disproportionately high value on objects that they partially assembled themselves". Ane xample of: effort justification. Bias category: cognitive dissonance. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-11 | 214_cb | |
illusion of asymmetric insight | A tendency to "perceive [that] their knowledge of their peers" exceeds "their peers' knowledge of them". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-21 | 215_cb | |
illusion of control | A tendency to "overestimate one's degree of influence over other external events". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-21 | 216_cb | |
illusion of explanatory depth | A tendency to "believe that one understands a topic much better than one actually does". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-21 | 217_cb | |
illusion of transparency | A tendency "to overestimate the degree to which their personal mental state is known by others, and to overestimate how well they understand others' personal mental states". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-21 | 218_cb | |
illusion of validity | A tendency "to overestimate the accuracy of one's judgments, especially when available information is consistent or inter-correlated". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-21 | 219_cb | |
illusory correlation | A tendency to inaccurately see "a relationship between two events related by coincidence". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-21 | 220_cb | |
implicit association | A tendency in which "the speed with which people can match words depends on how closely they are associated". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-21 | 223_cb | |
impostor syndrome | A tendency in which "an individual doubts their skills, talents, or accomplishments and has a persistent internalized fear of being exposed as a fraud". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-21 | 224_cb | |
ingroup bias | A tendency "to give preferential treatment to others they perceive to be members of their own groups". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-21 | 226_cb | |
information bias | As a cognitive bias, a tendency "to seek information even when it cannot affect action". As a logical fallacy, an attempt to prove a claim by overwhelming an audience with "mountains of true but marginally-relevant documents, graphs, words, facts, numbers, information and statistics s that look extremely impressive but which the...audience cannot be expected to understand or evaluate properly." A "fallacy of logos". Opposite of: plain truth fallacy. See also: lying with statistics. | [3], [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-28 | 227_cb_lf | |
insensitivity to sample size | A tendency "to under-expect variation in small samples". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-21 | 228_cb | |
intentionality bias | A tendency to "judge human action to be intentional rather than accidental". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-21 | 229_cb | |
interoceptive bias or hungry judge effect | A tendency "for sensory input about the body itself to affect one's judgement about external, unrelated circumstances". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-21 | 230_cb | |
just-world hypothesis | A tendency to "want to believe that the world is fundamentally just, causing them to rationalize an otherwise inexplicable injustice as deserved by the victim(s)". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 232_cb | |
lag effect | A tendency in which "learning is greater when studying is spread out over time, as opposed to studying the same amount of time in a single session". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 233_cb | |
law of the instrument | A tendency toward "over-reliance on a familiar tool or methods, ignoring or under-valuing alternative approaches". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 235_cb | |
less-is-better effect | A tendency to "prefer a smaller set to a larger set judged separately, but not jointly". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 236_cb | |
leveling and sharpening | A tendency toward "memory distortions introduced by the loss of details in a recollection over time" as well as "sharpening or selective recollection of certain details that take on exaggerated significance in relation to the details or aspects of the experience lost through leveling". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 237_cb | |
levels-of-processing effect | A tendency in which "different methods of encoding information into memory have different levels of effectiveness". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 238_cb | |
list-length effect | A tendency in which "a smaller percentage of items are remembered in a longer list, but as the length of the list increases, the absolute number of items remembered increases as well". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 239_cb | |
loss aversion | A tendency in which "the perceived disutility of giving up an object is greater than the utility associated with acquiring it". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 241_cb | |
memory bias | A general category of "cognitive bias that either enhances or impairs the recall of a memory". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 242_cb | |
memory inhibition | A tendency in which "being shown some items from a list makes it harder to retrieve the other items". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 243_cb | |
misattribution of memory | A tendency for a person recalling a memory to misidentify the origin of the memory. Examples include: cryptomnesia, false memory, social crytomnesia, source confusion, suggestibility, Perky effect. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-07 | 245_cb | |
misinformation effect | The tendency for an "original memory" to be "affected by incorrect information received later" ("a person's recall of episodic memories becomes less accurate because of post-event information"). | [6], [18] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-07 | 246_cb | |
modality effect | A tendency in which "memory recall is higher for the last items of a list when the list items were received via speech than when they were received through writing". A form of memory bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-11 | 247_cb | |
money illusion | A tendency to "concentrate on the nominal value (face value) of money rather than its value in terms of purchasing power". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 248_cb | |
moral credential effect | A tendency in which "someone who does something good" then "gives themselves permission to be less good in the future". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 251_cb | |
moral luck | A tendency "to ascribe greater or lesser moral standing based on the outcome of an event". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 252_cb | |
naive cynicism | A tendency to expect "more egocentric bias in others than in oneself". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 253_cb | |
naive realism | A tendency to belive that "we see reality as it really is", "objectively and without bias", and "that rational people will agree with us, and that those who do not are either uninformed, lazy, irrational, or biased". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 254_cb | |
neglect of probability | A tendency in which some people "have a greater recall of unpleasant memories compared with positive memories". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 257_cb | |
next-in-line effect | A tendency in which "people tend to have diminished recall for the words of the person who spoke immediately before them" when "taking turns speaking in a group using a predetermined order (e.g. going clockwise around a room, taking numbers, etc)". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 258_cb | |
normalcy bias | A tendency to refuse "to plan for, or react to, a disaster which has never happened before". Bias category: cognitive dissonance. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-11 | 260_cb | |
not invented here | A tendency to dislike or avoid the "contact with or use of products, research, standards, or knowledge developed outside a group". Example of: ingroup bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-11 | 261_cb | |
objectification | A tendency to treat "a person as an object or a thing". See also: anthropomorphism, dehumanised perception, dehumanization. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-11 | 262_cb | |
objectivity illusion | A tendency for people to "believe that they are more objective and unbiased than others". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 263_cb | |
observer-expectancy effect | A tendency in which "a researcher expects a given result and therefore unconsciously manipulates an experiment or misinterprets data in order to find it". See also: subject-expectancy effect. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 264_cb | |
omission bias | A tendency to "judge harmful actions (commissions) as worse, or less moral, than equally harmful inactions (omissions)". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 265_cb | |
optimism bias | A tendency "to be over-optimistic, underestimating greatly the probability of undesirable outcomes and overestimating favorable and pleasing outcomes". Opposite of: pessimism bias. See also: positive outcome bias, valence effect, wishful thinking. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-11 | 266_cb | |
ostrich effect | A tendency to ignore an "obvious negative situation". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 267_cb | |
outgroup favoritism | A tendency in which "some socially disadvantaged groups will express favorable attitudes (and even preferences) toward social, cultural, or ethnic groups other than their own". A form of: social bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-11 | 269_cb | |
outgroup homogeneity bias | A tendency in which "individuals see members of other groups as being relatively less varied than members of their own group". A form of: ingroup bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-11 | 270_cb | |
overconfidence effect | A tendency to "have excessive confidence in one's own answers to questions". A form of: egocentric bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-11 | 271_cb | |
pareidolia | A tendency to "to perceive a vague and random stimulus (often an image or sound) as significant". A form of: apophenia. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-11 | 272_cb | |
part-list cueing effect | A tendency in which "being shown some items from a list and later retrieving one item causes it to become harder to retrieve the other items". A form of: memory bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-11 | 273_cb | |
peak–end rule | A tendency in which "people seem to perceive not the sum of an experience but the average of how it was at its peak (e.g., pleasant or unpleasant) and how it ended". A form of: memory bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-11 | 274_cb | |
persistence | A tendency for a traumatic event to result in unwanted recurrence of memories. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-11 | 275_cb | |
pessimism bias | A tendency "for some people...to overestimate the likelihood of negative things happening to them". See also: cynicism. Opposite of: optimism bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-11 | 276_cb | |
picture superiority effect | A tendency in which "concepts that are learned by viewing pictures are more easily and frequently recalled than are concepts that are learned by viewing their written word form counterparts." | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-11 | 277_cb | |
placement bias | A tendency to "remember ourselves to be better than others at tasks at which we rate ourselves above average" and "to remember ourselves to be worse than others at tasks at which we rate ourselves below average". See also: better-than-average effect, illusory superiority, worse-than-average effect. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-11 | 278_cb | |
plan continuation bias | A tendency to fail to "recognize that the original plan of action is no longer appropriate for a changing situation or for a situation that is different from anticipated". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-11 | 279_cb_lf | |
planning fallacy | A tendency "for people to underestimate the time it will take them to complete a given task". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 280_cb | |
plant blindness | A tendency for people "to ignore plants in their environment" and "a failure to recognize and appreciate the utility of plants to life on earth". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 281_cb | |
positive outcome bias | A tendency in which people "overestimate the probability of good things happening to them". See also: optimism bias. | [6], [28] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 282_cb | |
positivity effect | A tendency in which "older adults favor positive over negative information in their memories". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 283_cb | |
prevention bias | A tendency "when investing money to protect against risks, decision makers perceive that a dollar spent on prevention buys more security than a dollar spent on timely detection and response, even when investing in either option is equally effective". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 285_cb | |
primacy effect | A tendency in which "an item at the beginning of a list is more easily recalled". A form of: serial position effect. See also: recency effect, suffix effect. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 286_cb | |
probability matching | A phenomenon of "sub-optimal matching of the probability of choices with the probability of reward in a stochastic context". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 287_cb | |
processing difficulty effect | A tendency in which "information that takes longer to read and is thought about more (processed with more difficulty) is more easily remembered". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 288_cb | |
projection bias | As a cognitive bias, a tendency "to overestimate how much one's future selves will share one's current preferences, thoughts and values, thus leading to sub-optimal choices". As a logical fallacy, an automatic and false assumption that everybody in some group context shares "basically the same (positive) wishes, desires, interests, concerns, ethics and moral code". A "fallacy of ethos". | [3], [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-28 | 289_cb_lf | |
proportionality bias | An "innate tendency to assume that big events have big causes" which "may also explain our tendency to accept conspiracy theories". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 290_cb | |
pseudocertainty effect | A tendency to "make risk-averse choices if the expected outcome is positive, but make risk-seeking choices to avoid negative outcomes". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 292_cb | |
puritanical bias | A tendency to "attribute cause of an undesirable outcome or wrongdoing by an individual to a moral deficiency or lack of self-control rather than taking into account the impact of broader societal determinants". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 293_cb | |
Pygmalion effect | A tendency in whcih "others' expectations of a target person affect the target person's performance". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 294_cb | |
reactance | A tendency to "do the opposite of what someone wants one to do out of a need to resist a perceived attempt to constrain one's freedom of choice". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 295_cb | |
reactive devaluation | A tendency to devalue proposals "only because they purportedly originated with an adversary.". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 296_cb | |
recency effect | A "form of serial position effect where an item at the end of a list is easier to recall". Can be disrupted by: suffix effet. See also: primacy effect. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 298_cb | |
recency illusion | A mistaken perception that "a phenomenon one has noticed only recently is itself recent". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 299_cb | |
reminiscence bump | A tendnecy to recall "more personal events from adolescence and early adulthood than personal events from other lifetime periods". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 300_cb | |
repetition blindness | The phenomenon of an "unexpected difficulty in remembering more than one instance of a visual sequence". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 301_cb | |
restraint bias | A tendency to "overestimate one's ability to show restraint in the face of temptation". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 302_cb | |
rhyme as reason effect | A tendnecy in which "rhyming statements are perceived as more truthful". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 303_cb | |
sexual underperception bias | A tendency to "underestimate sexual interest of another person in oneself". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 304_cb | |
rosy retrospection | A tendency to remember "the past as having been better than it really was". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 307_cb | |
saying is believing effect | A phenomenon in which "communicating a socially tuned message to an audience can lead to a bias of identifying the tuned message as one's own thoughts". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 309_cb | |
selective perception | A tendency for "expectations to affect perception". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 312_cb | |
self-relevance effect | A tendency in which "memories relating to the self are better recalled than similar information relating to others". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 313_cb | |
self-serving bias | A tendency to "claim more responsibility for successes than failures" or a tendency to "evaluate ambiguous information in a way beneficial to [one's] interests". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 314_cb | |
Semmelweis reflex | A tendency to "reject new evidence that contradicts a paradigm". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 315_cb | |
serial position effect | A tendency in which "items near the end of a sequence are the easiest to recall, followed by the items at the beginning of a sequence; items in the middle are the least likely to be remembered". See also: recency effect, primacy effect, suffix effect. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 316_cb | |
seven sins of memory | A tendency for memory failures to occur of the following types, as written about by Havard psychologist Daniel Schacter: transience, absent-mindedness, blocking, misattribution, suggestibility, bias, and persistence | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 317_cb | |
sexual overperception bias | A tendency to "overestimate sexual interest of another person in oneself". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 318_cb | |
shared information bias | A tendency "for group members to spend more time and energy discussing information that all members are already familiar with (i.e., shared information), and less time and energy discussing information that only some members are aware of (i.e., unshared information)". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 319_cb | |
social comparison bias | A tendency "when making decisions, to favour potential candidates who do not compete with one's own particular strengths". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 321_cb | |
social cryptomnesia | A phenomenon of "a failure by people and society in general to remember the origin of a change, in which people know that a change has occurred in society, but forget how this change occurred; that is, the steps that were taken to bring this change about, and who took these steps". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 322_cb | |
social desirability bias | A tendency to "over-report socially desirable characteristics or behaviours in oneself and under-report socially undesirable characteristics or behaviours". See also: courtesy bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 323_cb | |
source confusion | A phenomenon in which "episodic memories are confused with other information, creating distorted memories". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 324_cb | |
spacing effect | A tendency in which "information is better recalled if exposure to it is repeated over a long span of time rather than a short one". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 325_cb | |
spotlight effect | A tendecy to "overestimate the amount that other people notice one's appearance or behavior". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 326_cb | |
status quo bias | A tendency to "prefer things to stay relatively the same". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 327_cb | |
subadditivity effect | A tendency to "tendency to judge the probability of the whole to be less than the probabilities of the parts". Exampe of: logical fallacy. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 331_cb_lf | |
subject-expectancy effect | A phenomenon in which a "research subject expects a given result and therefore unconsciously affects the outcome, or reports the expected result". See also: observer-expectancy effect. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 332_cb | |
subjective validation | A phenomenon in which "statements are perceived as true if a subject's belief demands it to be true". Also in this phenomenon, one may assign "perceived connections between coincidences". A form of: truth judgement. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 333_cb | |
suffix effect | A "diminishment of the recency effect because a sound item is appended to the list that the subject is not required to recall". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 334_cb | |
suggestibility | A phenomenon in which "ideas suggested by a questioner are mistaken for memory". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 335_cb | |
surrogation | A phenomenon of "lLosing sight of the strategic construct that a measure is intended to represent, and subsequently acting as though the measure is the construct of interest.". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 338_cb | |
survivorship bias | A phenomenon of "concentrating on the people or things that 'survived' some process and inadvertently overlooking those that did not because of their lack of visibility". Example of: availability heuristic. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 339_cb | |
system justification | A tendency to "defend and bolster the status quo". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 340_cb | |
systematic bias | A phenomenon when "targets of differentiating judgement become subject to effects of regression that are not equivalent". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 341_cb | |
tachypsychia | A phenomenon in which "time perceived by the individual either lengthens, making events appear to slow down, or contracts". A form of: memory bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 342_cb | |
teleological bias | A tendency to "engage in overgeneralized ascriptions of purpose to entities and events that did not arise from goal-directed action, design, or selection based on functional effects". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 343_cb | |
telescoping effect | A tendency to "displace recent events backwards in time and remote events forward in time". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 344_cb | |
testing effect | A tendency to "more easily recall information one has read by rewriting it instead of rereading it". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 345_cb | |
Perky effect | A tendency "real images" to "influence imagined images, or be misremembered as imagined rather than real". An example of: misattribution of memory. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-07 | 346_cb | |
third-person effect | A tendency to "believe that mass-communicated media messages have a greater effect on others than on themselves". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 347_cb | |
time-saving bias | A tendency to "underestimate the time that could be saved (or lost) when increasing (or decreasing) from a relatively low speed, and to overestimate the time that could be saved (or lost) when increasing (or decreasing) from a relatively high speed". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 348_cb | |
tip of the tongue phenomenon | A phenomenon in which one is "able to recall parts of an item, or related information, but is frustratingly unable to recall the whole item". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 349_cb | |
trait ascription bias | A tendency "for people to view themselves as relatively variable in terms of personality, behavior, and mood while viewing others as much more predictable". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 350_cb | |
Travis syndrome | A tendency to overestimate "the significance of the present". See also: chronological snobbery, appeal to novelty. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 351_cb | |
truth bias | A tendency "towards believing, to some degree, the communication of another person, regardless of whether or not that person is actually lying or being untruthful". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 352_cb | |
Turkey illusion | A tendency to be surprised by a break in at trend "if one does not know the causes or the framework conditions for this trend". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 353_cb | |
ultimate attribution error | A tendency in which "a person is likely to make an internal attribution to an entire group instead of the individuals within the group". Similar to: fundamental attribution error. A type of: attribution bias. | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 354_cb | |
unit bias | A tendency in which a "standard suggested amount of consumption (e.g., food serving size) is perceived to be appropriate" and in which "a person would consume it all even if it is too much for this particular person". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 357_cb | |
valence effect | A tendency in which, given equivalent factual information, the framing of an event as positive (desirable) or negative (undesirable) can result in differing levels of unrealistic optimism. See also: optimism bias. | [6], [29] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 358_cb | |
value selection bias | A tendency to "rely on existing numerical data when reasoning in an unfamiliar context, even if calculation or numerical manipulation is required". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 359_cb | |
verbatim effect | A tendency in which "the 'gist' of what someone has said is better remembered than the verbatim wording". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 360_cb | |
von Restorff effect | A tendency in which "an item that sticks out is more likely to be remembered than other items". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 361_cb | |
Weber–Fechner law | Dual tendencies in which "the perceived change in stimuli is proportional to the initial stimuli" and also "for multiplications in stimulus strength, the strength of perception only adds" (except, neither tendency is the case "at low intensity"). | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-22 | 362_cb | |
well travelled road effect | A tendency to "underestimate the duration taken to traverse oft-travelled routes and overestimate the duration taken to traverse less familiar routes". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 363_cb | |
wishful thinking | A tendency to belive something based on "what might be pleasing to imagine, rather than on evidence, rationality, or reality". | [6], [30] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 364_cb | |
women are wonderful effect | A tendency to "associate more positive attributes with women than with men". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 365_cb | |
worse-than-average effect | A tendency to "believe ourselves to be worse than others at tasks which are difficult". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 366_cb | |
Zeigarnik effect | A phenomenon in which "uncompleted or interrupted tasks are remembered better than completed ones". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 367_cb | |
zero-sum bias | A phenomenon in which "a situation is incorrectly perceived to be like a zero-sum game (i.e., one person gains at the expense of another)". | [6] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-08-26 | 369_cb_lf | |
argumentum ad odium | See also: argumentum ad personam, ad hominem. | [15] | 2024-06-11 | 2024-07-02 | 382_lf | |
I wish I had a magic wand | Falsely proclaiming oneself to be unfortunately "powerless to change a bad or objectionable situation" over which one actually does have power (for example, by ignoring various real possibilities). See also: there is no alternative, TINA. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-08-27 | 492_lf | |
a priori argument | A given pre-conceived conclusion is determined from the start, then any argument is sought to support it. Reasoning "from what is before" without observation or experience. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-12 | 494_lf | |
appeal to rigor | A fallacy arguing based on mercilessness (showing no fear or pity). "Often based on machismo or on manipulating an audience's fear." Can apply to "politically-motivated or elitist calls for academic rigor". Can apply to criticism of developmental or remedial classes, open admissions, dumbing down, and grade inflation. Opposite of: affective fallacy, appeal to emotion, appeal to pity, argument from pity, argumentum ad misericordiam, emotion over reflection, follow your heart, playing to emotions, romantic fallacy. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-06-26 | 500_lf | |
argument from natural law | A fallacy in which something is deemed to be true or untrue, or good or bad, as a result of being natural or unnatural (or "against nature") as judged by one's own authority to determine what is natural or unnatural. | [3] | 2024-06-12 | 2024-07-02 | 502_lf | |
be-verb fallacy |