| The Semi-Attached Figure |
The The Semi-Attached Figure / Superficially Convincing Fog FallacyThe The Semi-Attached Figure / Superficially Convincing Fog Fallacy occurs when a true premise is given, but the implication is not true. In statistics, a semi-attached figure/number is a number that appears more relevant than it is. Examples of the The The Semi-Attached Figure / Superficially Convincing Fog Fallacy
Retsyn is there, and it sounds important, but it's just a bonding agent. It doesn't make your breath smell better. "Certs with mint" just doesn't sound as exciting.
That almost sounds like it's a relevant fact. However, speciation is a red herring fallacy. Speciation is observed. Changes between kinds of living things apparently don't happen. There would be some physical evidence of it. There is also a sever problem with information.
Information Theory Questions and Answers
How can we know anything about anything? That’s the real question |
Other Pages in this sectionFaulty Appeal to Authority False Attribution Pretentiousness Ad Verecundiam Biased Authority Anonymous Authority Appeal to Self-Declared Authority Authority of the Select Few Invincible Authority Appeal to Celebrity Style over Substance Appeal to the Exotic Appeal to Gravity Appeal to Accomplishment Appeal to Control of Scientific Journals Control of Scientific Funding Appeal to Control of News Media Spotlight Wisdom of the Ancients Argument to the Purse Halo Effect Reverse Halo Effect / Devil Effect According to the Rules Fallacy Word Magic Recently Viewed |