A | B |
slippery slope | Event A will cause Event B (snowball effect) |
false dilemma | presents an either/or situation |
false analogy | makes comparisons that are faulty based upon an illogical premise |
false authority | using a biased, incredible, or suspicious authority |
personal attack (ad hominem) | diverting the argument by attacking the person |
non sequitur | using a diversionary tactic when answering a question; it does not follow sequence |
circular reasoning | arguing in a circle by stating same thing in a different way |
inductive reasoning | research or inference which moves from specific to general |
deductive reasoning | moves from general to specific |
example of slippery slope | "If we don't kill Caesar, Rome will collapse." |
example of false dilemma | "Either I kill Caesar or I will be a slave." |
example of false analogy | Caesar has ambition. Ambition is evil. Caesar is evil. |
example of false authority | "I can help you win the football game! I'm an English teacher." |
example of personal attack | "Don't vote for Obama. He smokes." |
example of non sequitur | I asked if my blind date is good-looking. You said "He has a great personality." |
aside | brief remark made my character on stage; not every character hears it |
soliloquy | long speech made by a character ALONE on stage |
monologue | long speech made by a character and heard by other characters |
dialogue | conversation among characters |