- Mar 13, 2004
- 18,941
- 1,758
- Country
- United States
- Gender
- Male
- Faith
- Non-Denom
- Marital Status
- Married
Well, I'd stop if I saw you learning from your mistakes or showing some intellectual humility at least once in a while, but I don't expect that to actually happen. It's actually become a kind of fun exercise untangling the mess of logical fallacies and misapprehensions you routinely present as arguments here, so if you're still getting something out of this too we're still in a win-win.
A conclusion is a statement that follows from premises, so by calling the statement a conclusion you're implying that there was at least one premise. The fallacious part of begging the question isn't in having no evidence, it's in presenting the conclusion as the evidence and then proceeding to the conclusion as a conclusion. It's called question-begging because it begs the question as to where the actual support for the conclusion is. You can make a statement that has no evidence to support it without committing a logical fallacy.
I would like to know where you got this idea, because it is incorrect as I have demonstrated.
a simple google scholar search for fallacious statements proves you wrong. Many peer review articles quote fallacious statements, according to your view only arguments can be fallacious. So I assume you will move the goal posts now and say that only statements that are arguments can be fallacious. But then I could also state that every statement is an argument, so there is that.
https://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en&as_sdt=0,5&q=fallacious+statements&btnG=
and by the way I am getting a lot from our debates. When you are nice, I actually like debating with you. But when I start winning you are a sore loser.
Upvote
0