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The role of memory in affirming-the-consequent fallacy. [PDF]
Higuchi Y +4 more
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Is the “Ecological Fallacy” a Fallacy?
Human and Ecological Risk Assessment (HERA), 2000Ecological studies of health effects due to agent exposure are generally considered to be a blunt instrument of scientific investigation, unfit to determine the “true” exposure-effect relationship for an agent. Based on this widely accepted tenet, ecological studies of the correlation between the local air concentration of radon and the local lung ...
Fritz A. Seiler, Joseph L. Alvarez
exaly +2 more sources
Transportation Research, Part A: Policy and Practice, 2019
The Planning Fallacy has been heralded as the best theoretical perspective to explain ‘how projects work’, particularly within the transportation area.
Peter E D Love +2 more
exaly +2 more sources
The Planning Fallacy has been heralded as the best theoretical perspective to explain ‘how projects work’, particularly within the transportation area.
Peter E D Love +2 more
exaly +2 more sources
Chatbot-based training on logical fallacy in EFL argumentative writing
Innovation in Language Learning and Teaching, 2023EFL learners generally have the problem of logical fallacies in EFL argumentative writings. Logical fallacies are errors in reasoning that can undermine EFL argumentative writing quality. Explicit training on logical fallacies may help learners deal with
Ruofei Zhang, Di Zou, G. Cheng
semanticscholar +1 more source
Grit and conscientiousness: Another jangle fallacy
, 2020When grit was first introduced, it gained popularity before basic psychometric questions were fully explored. One critical issue is how distinct grit is from the Big Five personality trait conscientiousness.
Annette R. Ponnock +5 more
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The “is-ought fallacy” fallacy
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2011AbstractMere facts about how the world is cannot determine how we ought to think or behave. Elqayam & Evans (E&E) argue that this “is-ought fallacy” undercuts the use of rational analysis in explaining how people reason, by ourselves and with others. But this presumed application of the “is-ought” fallacy is itself fallacious. Rational analysis
Mike Oaksford, Nick Chater
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