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Philosophy

What Is Solipsism, in Simple Terms

February 13, 2019

What is solipsism? In simplified terms, solipsism is the philosophical hypothesis which affirms that you know nothing outside your own mind.

You might have heard of cogito, ergo sum (I think, therefore I am), by René Descartes. Solipsism is a parallel proposition. However, the repercussions of what solipsism affirms are more interesting.

what is solipsism
Simplified, solipsism says you are the only thing that exists, and everything else is just created by your mind for your sake
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Post Hoc Fallacy Examples

January 20, 2019

The post hoc fallacy is a widespread logical fallacy. Post hoc fallacy examples abound everywhere around us, and especially on the internet – where all fallacies are exposed sooner or later!

The full name of this fallacy is post hoc ergo propter hoc, which means “after this, therefore because of this” in Latin. In simple terms, a post hoc fallacy is one where when two events happen soon after each other, the occurrence of the second is attributed to the first.

post hoc fallacy examples
“Me? The cause of bad luck?”

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Appeal to Hypocrisy: the Tu Quoque Fallacy

December 27, 2018

Articles on fallacies are popular on the Home for Fiction blog. We’ve talked about the Appeal to Nature fallacy, the Bandwagon fallacy, and the Only Game in Town fallacy. Today I’ll talk to you about the Appeal to Hypocrisy fallacy, also known as “Tu Quoque”. The term is Latin and means “You, too”. I will use the terms interchangeably in this article, they mean exactly the same thing.

As with all fallacies, the Appeal to Hypocrisy is an attempt to ameliorate one’s argument with parameters that do not stand the test of argumentation and logic. Generally speaking, a person committing a fallacy might do it inadvertently; that is to say, without intent. Here’s an example:

Everyone at the office agrees, the boss is stupid.

This feels like a very natural thing to say. There doesn’t seem to be anything wrong with it, right? And yet, though the statement might still be true, it’s not argumentatively solid. The mere fact that every employee agrees, doesn’t prove that the boss is indeed stupid. This is an example of the Bandwagon fallacy.

Conversely, it is uncommon that a person would commit the Appeal to Hypocrisy fallacy unknowingly. The nature of this fallacy is such that the person deploying it in an argument is usually fully aware that his/her argument is weak, and the fallacy is committed precisely to create distraction.

appeal to hypocrisy
Just because someone is a hypocrite, it does not remove the validity of their argument
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