Ad Hominem - Attacking the person and not their argument., Slippery Slope - Moving from a simple starting point and working through a number of small steps to an improbable extreme., Appeal to Pity - Basing an argument solely on the emotional response it elicits from the audience., False Analogy - When a comparison is used to prove a point but the two items have KEY differences that undermine the argument., Hasty Generalization - Using a statement that is only sometimes true as evidence to support a specific claim., Appeal to Ignorance - When you argue that your statement must be true because there is no evidence that says it isn't true., Appeal to Law - Using the law as an absolute justification for right or wrong., False Dilemma - Presenting two alternative options as the only possibilities, when in fact more possibilities exist., Strawman - When you misrepresent the opposing argument in order to make it easier to attack., Red Herring - When you introduce an unrelated item to take attention away from the point that is being challenged., Tu quoque - Instead of responding to the argument, you deflect them back on the other person and claim that they are being hypocritical., Bandwagon - Assuming something is true because other people agree with it., Post Hoc - When someone claims that since one event occurred before another, then the first event must have caused the other event.,

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