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Think Again IV: How to Avoid Fallacies

 2 years ago
source link: https://www.coursera.org/learn/logical-fallacies
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Syllabus - What you will learn from this course

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Hours to complete
15 minutes to complete

Welcome to the Course

Welcome to Think Again: How to Avoid Fallacies! This course is the fourth in the specialization Introduction to Logic and Critical Thinking, based on our original Coursera course titled Think Again: How to Reason and Argue. We are excited that you are taking this course, and we hope that you will take all four courses in the series, because there is a great deal of important material to learn. In the series as a whole, you learn how to analyze and evaluate arguments and how to avoid common mistakes in reasoning. These important skills will be useful to you in deciding what to believe and what to do in all areas of your life. We encounter fallacies almost everywhere we look. Politicians, salespeople, and children commonly use fallacies in order to get us to think what they want us to think. Think Again: How to Avoid Fallacies will show how to identify and avoid many of the fallacies that people use to get us to think the way they want us to think. The first part of this course introduces the series and the course. It also clarifies some peculiarities you may find with this course. We encourage you to watch the "Introduction to the Specialization" video first as it will help you learn more from the materials that come later.

Reading
1 video (Total 5 min), 1 reading
Reading1 reading
Course Logistics (Start Here)10m
Hours to complete
6 hours to complete

Fallacies of Unclarity

CONTENT: In this week's material we will describes two phenomena that are both common and useful in the languages that human beings speak, but both of which give rise to the potential for fallacious reasoning. A word or phrase is vague when its meaning is not precise, and it is ambiguous when it has more than one meaning. When we use vague or ambiguous phrases in our reasoning, it is very easy for us to make a number of different kinds of fallacies. This week will teach you what these different kinds of fallacies are, and give us some practice in spotting them, so you can make sure to avoid them in the future. LEARNING OUTCOMES : By the end of this week's material you will be able to: define what a fallacy is distinguish various kinds of fallacies understand the linguistic phenomena that give rise to fallacies identify various kinds of slippery slop fallacies where they occur identify various kinds of fallacies of equivocation where they occur OPTIONAL READING: If you want more examples or more detailed discussions of the fallacies that result from vaguness or ambiguity, we recommend Understanding Arguments, Ninth Edition, Chapters 13-14.

Reading
9 videos (Total 71 min)
Video9 videos
Argument from the Heap7m
Vagueness8m
Conceptual Slippery Slopes6m
Fairness Slippery Slopes6m
Causal Slippery Slopes6m
Ambiguity8m
Semantic and Syntactic Ambiguity13m
Fallacies of Equivocation6m
Quiz7 practice exercises
Introduction to Fallacies30m
Vagueness30m
Slippery Slopes30m
Fairness Slippery Slopes30m
Causal Slippery Slopes30m
Semantic and Syntactic Ambiguity30m
Fallacies of Equivocation30m
Hours to complete
4 hours to complete

Fallacies of Relevance

CONTENT: This week describes two of the most common fallacies that people make: ad hominem fallacies and appeals to authority. Part of what makes these fallacies so common, and so difficult to avoid, is that many ad hominem arguments, and many appeals to authority, are actually not fallacies at all! Only some of them are. And figuring out which of them are fallacies is more of an art than a science. There is no simple recipe, but there are some rules of thumb you can use. We hope that the practice that you get in this week will help you to improve your skills at distinguish the fallacious from the non-fallacious instances of ad hominem reasoning, as well as appeal to authority. LEARNING OUTCOMES: By the end of this section you will be able to: determine whether an ad hominem argument is a fallacy determine whether an appeal to authority is a fallacy OPTIONAL READING: If you want more examples or more detailed discussions of these topics, we recommend Understanding Arguments, Ninth Edition, Chapter 15.

Reading
10 videos (Total 68 min)
Video10 videos
Fallacies of Relevance: Ad Hominem8m
Silencers10m
Dismissers6m
Deniers6m
Appeals to Authority6m
Amplifiers4m
Supporters4m
Affirmers5m
Appeals to Popular Opinion3m
Quiz5 practice exercises
Dismissers30m
Deniers30m
Supporters30m
Affirmers30m
Appeals to Popular Opinion30m
Hours to complete
2 hours to complete

Fallacies of Vacuity and Circularity

CONTENT: Now we will describe another common set of fallacies: fallacies that occur when an argument makes no progress from its premises to its conclusion. Sometimes, arguments make no progress because the conclusion is already contained in the premises. Sometimes, arguments make no progress because the conclusion is presupposed by the premises. And sometimes, arguments make no progress because the premises don’t make any claim at all, even if they might sound like they do. When you know how to identify such fallacies, you will find that they are more common than you think! LEARNING OUTCOMES: By the end of this section you will be able to: identify various kinds of circularity or vacuity where they occur OPTIONAL READING: If you want more examples or more detailed discussions of these topics, we recommend Understanding Arguments,Ninth Edition, Chapter 16.

Reading
3 videos (Total 17 min)
Video3 videos
Circularity and Begging the Question4m
Self-Sealers8m
Quiz3 practice exercises
Fallacies of Vacuity30m
Circularity and Begging the Question30m
Self-Sealers30m
Hours to complete
4 hours to complete

Refutation: Its Varieties and PItfalls

CONTENT: This week we will teach you various strategies for refuting a fallacious argument. To refute an argument is to show that the argument is unsuccessful. Even if you are able to identify a fallacious argument as a fallacy, you might still not be able to prove to others that it is a fallacy. In this week, you will learn a variety of techniques for proving to others that the argument is a fallacy. LEARNING OUTCOMES: By the end of this week you will be able to: refute fallacious arguments OPTIONAL READING: If you want more examples or more detailed discussions of these topics, we recommend Understanding Arguments, Ninth Edition, Chapter 17.

Reading
7 videos (Total 71 min)
Video7 videos
Refutation by Parallel Reasoning11m
False Dichotomy16m
Reductio Ad Absurdum7m
Counterexamples10m
Attacking a Straw Man12m
Why Walter Should Shave His Head6m
Quiz4 practice exercises
Refutation by Parallel Reasoning30m
Reductio Ad Absurdum30m
Counterexamples30m
Attacking a Straw Man30m
Hours to complete
2 hours to complete

Catch-Up and Final Quiz

This week gives you time to catch up and review, because we realize that the previous weeks include a great deal of challenging material. It will also be provide enough time to take the final quiz as often as you want, with different questions each time. We explain the answers in each exam so that you can learn more and do better when you try the exam again. You may take the quiz as many times as you want in order to learn more and do better, with different questions each time. You will be able to retake the quiz three times every eight hours. You might not need to take more than one version of the exam if you do well enough on your first try. That is up to you. However many versions you take, we hope that all of the exams will provide additional learning experiences.

Reading
1 video (Total 5 min)
Video1 video
Quiz1 practice exercise
Final Exam30m

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