coke is a real thing.
The sentimental appeals fallacy involves using emotions to persuade rather than logic. Examples include using pity, fear, or guilt to sway someone's opinion, rather than presenting factual evidence or reasoning.
Examples of the ignoring the question fallacy include changing the subject when someone asks a difficult question, providing irrelevant information in response to a specific inquiry, or deflecting attention away from the original topic by giving unrelated answers.
The fallacy of perfection in everyday life is when people believe that things must be flawless or perfect to be acceptable. Examples include expecting a perfect relationship, flawless appearance, or flawless performance at work. This unrealistic expectation can lead to dissatisfaction and stress.
The sentimental appeal fallacy occurs when emotions are used to manipulate or persuade rather than logical reasoning. Examples include using pity to win an argument, appealing to nostalgia to justify a position, or relying on fear to sway opinions.
The ad populum fallacy occurs when an argument is based on the belief that something is true because many people believe it. Examples include "Everyone is doing it, so it must be right" or "If it's popular, it must be good." This fallacy can impact the validity of an argument by relying on popularity rather than evidence or logic to support a claim, leading to a weak or flawed argument.
Snow white and the seven dwarfs
The Ruined Maid by Thomas Hardy for one.
The sentimental appeals fallacy involves using emotions to persuade rather than logic. Examples include using pity, fear, or guilt to sway someone's opinion, rather than presenting factual evidence or reasoning.
Examples of the ignoring the question fallacy include changing the subject when someone asks a difficult question, providing irrelevant information in response to a specific inquiry, or deflecting attention away from the original topic by giving unrelated answers.
The fallacy of perfection in everyday life is when people believe that things must be flawless or perfect to be acceptable. Examples include expecting a perfect relationship, flawless appearance, or flawless performance at work. This unrealistic expectation can lead to dissatisfaction and stress.
The sentimental appeal fallacy occurs when emotions are used to manipulate or persuade rather than logical reasoning. Examples include using pity to win an argument, appealing to nostalgia to justify a position, or relying on fear to sway opinions.
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.
some vicious mole...
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.
The ad populum fallacy occurs when an argument is based on the belief that something is true because many people believe it. Examples include "Everyone is doing it, so it must be right" or "If it's popular, it must be good." This fallacy can impact the validity of an argument by relying on popularity rather than evidence or logic to support a claim, leading to a weak or flawed argument.
The 'abstraction' nouns are called abstract or idea noun. Abstract nouns are words for things that are not experienced by the five senses; things that can't be seen, heard, smelled, tasted, or touched. Abstract nouns are words for things that are known, understood, or felt emotionally. Some examples are:ambitionbeautychallengedangereducationfeargratitudehappinessignorancejoyknowledgeluckmemorynonsenseopinionquestrumorseasontrusturgevaluewonderyesterdayzeal
http://onegoodmove.org/fallacy/induct.htm details some examples: Hasty Generalization Unrepresentative Sample False Analogy Slothful Induction Fallacy of Exclusion