Accepting an argument to be true because the person who makes it is wealthy. Also known as argumentum ad crumenam or an argument to the purse. The fallacy got its name because of the introduction of financial status in an argument. “Crumenam” is Latin for wallet. The appeal to wealth is an informal, red herring…
Category: Appeal to Authority
Appeal to Authority is set of fallacies which all appeal to an authority of some sort, while the authority may be wrong itself, be irrelevant, wrongly cited, inexistent, or be of questionable authority to begin with.
Appeal To False Authority
When we reach a point in an argument where we have no expertise, we call upon an authority. If that authority isn’t really an authority, the argument becomes fallacious. This fallacy is called appeal to authority or argumentum ad verecundiam. What does “authority that isn’t really an authority mean? Well, look at it this way….
Bandwagon Fallacy
It’s best to look at the bandwagon fallacy as a variant of two other fallacies rather than as a distinct fallacy. More precisely, it’s an effect, the bandwagon effect that occurs when the appeal to popularity or the appeal to the people fallacy is made. What exactly is the bandwagon effect? It’s the product of…
Appeal To Majority
An appeal to majority is also known as an appeal to belief. Making an argument that states something to be true because a group of people or the majority believe it to be true, is a fallacy called appeal to belief. It’s also known as argumentum ad populum, appeal to the people, and appeal to…
Appeal to Common Practice
Appeal to (Common) Belief
Making an argument that states something to be true because a group of people or the majority believe it to be true, is a fallacy called appeal to belief. It’s also known as argumentum ad populum, appeal to the people, and appeal to the majority. Logic form: A group of people/ many people believe X…