asked 187k views
3 votes
Assume that the premise(s) of the following argument are true. Apply the other three tests of the worthiness of an argument in their proper order: "We've lost six games in a row; our luck is probably going to change today." That argument is an example of ________.

asked
User GurdeepS
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8.3k points

2 Answers

5 votes

Answer: fallacy masquerading as a warranted inference

Explanation: The argument is an example of a fallacy masquerading as a warranted inference. Warranted arguments pass the test of logical strength and they describe an inference or argument such that the truth of the premises justifies or strongly supports confidently accepting the conclusion as very probably true, but not necessarily true. For every argument where the assumption that all the premises are true makes it very probable or highly likely that the conclusion is true (i.e. if the premises justify or strongly

support confidently taking the conclusion to be true),

then such argument or inference is evaluated as warranted.

answered
User Rob Juurlink
by
8.1k points
4 votes

Answer:

A falacy masquerading as a valid inference

Step-by-step explanation:

Assume that the premise(s) of the following argument are true. Apply the other three tests of the worthiness of an argument in their proper order: "We've lost six games in a row; our luck is probably going to change today." That argument is an example of A falacy masquerading as a valid inference

answered
User Erie
by
8.4k points
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