6-1 (pg. 162).
Recognize how fallacies can garble the structure of a good argument and they may sometimes
be altered to become good arguments.
6-2 (pgs. 162-166).
Understand the type of pseudoreasoning called ad hominem and how to identify it.
- Differentiate between the person making an argument and the argument
itself.
- Differentiate between the most common types of ad hominem: personal
attacks, circumstantial ad hominem, pseudorefutation, poisoning the
well, and the genetic fallacy.
6-3 (pgs. 166-169 ).
Understand the type of pseudoreasoning concerned with the burden of proof and how
to identify it.
- Identify which side of a given issue has the burden of proof.
- Understand the role of initial plausibility in determining the burden
of proof.
- Recognize the special type of burden of proof pseudoreasoning
called an appeal to ignorance.
6-4 (pgs. 169-171).
Understand the type of pseudoreasoning called straw man and how to identify it.
6-5 (pgs. 171-174).
Understand the type of pseudoreasoning called false dilemma and how to identify it.
- Differentiate between a false dilemma and its logical
counterpart.
- Recognize and differentiate between these subtypes of false
dilemma pseudoreasoning: the perfectionist fallacy and the line-drawing
fallacy.
6-6 (pgs. 174-176).
Understand the type of pseudoreasoning called slippery slope and how to identify
it.
- Recognize that reliance on unfounded claims is what makes an argument
an example of slippery slope pseudoreasoning.
6-7 (pgs. 176-178).
Understand the type of pseudoreasoning called begging the question and how to
identify it.