Difference between revisions of "Association fallacy"
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m (Association fallacy ENJOYING BRIAN PEPPERS DAY??? moved to Association fallacy over redirect: Undoing "BRIAN PEPPERS DAY" vandalism) |
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==Overview== | ==Overview== | ||
− | [[category:logical fallacies]]An [[association fallacy]] is a type of [[logical fallacy]] which asserts (or implies) that qualities of one are inherently qualities of another, merely by association. | + | [[category:logical fallacies]]An [[association fallacy]] is a type of [[logical fallacy]] which asserts (or implies) that qualities of one are inherently qualities of another, merely by association. It sometimes referred to more specifically as "[[guilt by association]]" or (less commonly) "[[honor by association]]". |
− | The association fallacy is a special case of [[red herring]], and is often based in an [[appeal to emotion]]. | + | The association fallacy is a special case of [[red herring]], and is often based in an [[appeal to emotion]] even though emotions may not specifically be referenced. |
The association fallacy is also a form of [[reasoning by reputation]] when it is applied to personal reputations. | The association fallacy is also a form of [[reasoning by reputation]] when it is applied to personal reputations. | ||
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==Links== | ==Links== | ||
===Reference=== | ===Reference=== | ||
* {{wikipedia}} | * {{wikipedia}} | ||
* {{conservapedia|Guilt by Association}} (Guilt by Association) | * {{conservapedia|Guilt by Association}} (Guilt by Association) | ||
− | * | + | * {{!in|dkosopedia}}: no equivalent article (as of 2008-05-06) |
− | * | + | * {{!in|sourcewatch}}: no equivalent article (as of 2008-05-06); see [[sourcewatch:Transfer (propaganda technique)|Transfer]] |
===Filed Links=== | ===Filed Links=== | ||
{{links.tagged}} | {{links.tagged}} |
Revision as of 15:07, 15 March 2009
Overview
An association fallacy is a type of logical fallacy which asserts (or implies) that qualities of one are inherently qualities of another, merely by association. It sometimes referred to more specifically as "guilt by association" or (less commonly) "honor by association".
The association fallacy is a special case of red herring, and is often based in an appeal to emotion even though emotions may not specifically be referenced.
The association fallacy is also a form of reasoning by reputation when it is applied to personal reputations.
Links
Reference
- Wikipedia
- Conservapedia (Guilt by Association)
dKosopedia: no equivalent article (as of 2008-05-06)SourceWatch: no equivalent article (as of 2008-05-06); see Transfer
Filed Links
- redirect template:links/smw