Across
- 1. This fallacy occurs when someone distorts or exaggerates another person’s argument and then attacks the distorted version of the argument instead of genuinely engaging
- 5. This fallacy occurs when an argument requires you to accept the conclusion in order to make the argument
- 6. This fallacy is also sometimes called the appeal to common belief or appeal to the masses
- 7. This fallacy that presents only two options or sides when there are many options or sides
Down
- 1. In this fallacy, a person makes a claim that one event leads to another event and so on until we come to some awful conclusion
- 2. This fallacy is an argument that has little or nothing to do with the primary argument in order to distract the other speaker
- 3. This type of fallacy is sometimes called name calling or the personal attack fallacy
- 4. This fallacy automatically assumes one event caused or will cause another, without taking the steps to prove this link
