An example of begging the question is saying, 'He is drunk because he is under the influence of alcohol.' It is a type of circular reasoning.
circular
This would be like evading the question. A fallacy is delusion, deception, and deceit. Some other examples would be omit, evade, disregard, reject, neglect, overlook, and disdain.
"Begging the question" is a little understood and much misused phrase. It refers to the logical fallacy of asking someone to accept your conclusion as a premise. Logical argument is supposed to proceed from statements which everyone accepts to others which are debatable. A question-begging argument assumes the question under debate as a premise.At its simplest, it might go like this:A: Prove to me that Jimmy Hoffa was abducted by aliens.B: OK. Let's assume that Jimmy Hoffa was abducted by aliens.A: All right.B: Well, if that's the case then obviously Hoffa wasabducted by aliens. There's your proof.A more complicated (but very common) form involves assuming two propositions which prove each other.A: Prove to me that the Bible is the Word of God and that it is always true.B: Well, the Bible is the Word of God, so it must be true.A: But how do you prove that the Bible is the Word of God?B: The Bible must be the word of God, because it says so in the Bible, and the Bible is always true.Since both "The Bible is the Word of God" and "The Bible is always true" are propositions to be proven, B cannot base his argument on either of them, so the above argument is question-begging. If A accepted either one, B could legitimately derive the other from it.
'Begging the question' (petitio principii) is the fallacy of making the answer to a question part of the question itself. In the days before women began to speak for themselves many men argued that: "No real woman would even want to go out to work. She would rather stay at home and keep house for her husband and family." If you pointed out that Florence Nightingale, Marie Curie and even Joan of Arc all found better things to do than 'stay at home and keep house for their husband', the person making the case could say "Yes, but those people were not real women.". Perhaps Florence Nightingale, Marie Curie and Joan of Arc were really men in women's bodies, perhaps they were androids, or possibly hippopotamuses - someone who 'begs the question' already knows what the truth is:- they are hardly going to be hindered by reality.
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Begging the question is a logical fallacy in which the proposition to be proved is assumed implicitly or explicitly in the premise.
this question is appauling.
circular
An example of begging the question is saying, 'He is drunk because he is under the influence of alcohol.' It is a type of circular reasoning.
circular
WTFiWWY - 2010 Begging the Question 2-16 was released on: USA: 3 June 2011
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I think that the answer is : Begging the question
begging the question.
Begging the question
begging = humihingi ex: begging for money = humihingi ng limos begging for forgiveness = humihingi ng kapatawaran