Difference between revisions of "Semantic chameleon"

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''See also: [[:category:slippery language]]''

Revision as of 15:21, 27 December 2012

About

A semantic chameleon is a word or phrase whose multiple meanings leave an easy opening to construct a fallacious argument that appears true. The fallacy can only be discovered by realizing that the same word or phrase is being used to refer to things that are not equivalent.

Semantic chameleons are typically used within semantic bait-and-switch arguments, where one definition is used as a "bait" (to get the audience to agree to a key premise) and the other is used as a "hook" (to force the audience to agree with the fallacious conclusion conflating the two definitions).

Examples

See also: category:slippery language