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Logical  Fallacy: a error in reasoning
  (adj)     (noun)

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Statement #84 Discussion

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Below is the statement as it appears with the fallacy marked as correct. You can see the totals of most frequent responses to this statement. And after reading the any discussion going on below, you can select your choice(s) for the correct answer. For now, whoever posts each statement can update corrections.
Is mathematics an invention or a discovery?
False Dilemma
AKA Black & White Thinking

Category: Fallacies of Presumption

A False Dilemma is a fallacy in which a person uses the following pattern of "reasoning":

  1. Either claim X is true or claim Y is true (when X and Y could both be false).
  2. Claim Y is false.
  3. Therefore claim X is true.
This line of "reasoning" is fallacious because if both claims could be false, then it cannot be inferred that one is true because the other is false. That this is the case is made clear by the following example:
  1. Either 1+1 =4 or 1+1=12.
  2. It is not the case that 1+1 = 4.
  3. Therefore 1+1 =12.
In cases in which the two options are, in fact, the only two options, this line of reasoning is not fallacious. For example:
  1. Bill is dead or he is alive.
  2. Bill is not dead.
  3. Therefore Bill is alive.

Click For Fallacy Description

 1,274 Total Answer Attempts   64%
 816 Correctly Popped Fallacies
 458 Incorrectly Un/Popped
( Random Image )

Most Common Responses

 
816 - False Dilemma
71 - Begging the Question
41 - Fallacy of Division
29 - Burden of Proof
28 - Confusing Cause and Effect
23 - Fallacy of Composition
20 - Relativist Fallacy
17 - Red Herring
16 - Appeal to Belief
16 - Appeal to the Consequences of a Belief
16 - Appeal to Common Practice
14 - Middle Ground
14 - Circumstantial Ad Hominem
13 - Genetic Fallacy
12 - Hasty Generalization
12 - Post Hoc
11 - Ignoring a Common Cause
10 - Gambler's Fallacy
10 - Appeal to Novelty
9 - Misleading Vividness
9 - Ad Hominem Tu Quoque
9 - Special Pleading
7 - Biased Generalization
6 - Poisoning the Well
6 - Appeal to Ridicule
6 - Appeal to Authority
5 - Appeal to Popularity
5 - Peer Pressure
5 - Appeal to Tradition
4 - Ad Hominem
4 - Slippery Slope
2 - Guilt by Association
2 - Personal Attack
2 - Appeal to Pity
1 - Appeal to Fear
1 - Appeal to Spite
1 - Appeal to Flattery
1 - Appeal to Emotion

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* Fallacious statements are usually paired with a random image of a person who never spoke those words.
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