Logical Fallacies — Convergence Protocol

Errors in reasoning that undermine the logic of an argument


What is a Logical Fallacy?

A logical fallacy is a flaw in reasoning that makes an argument invalid, unsound, or weak. Unlike cognitive biases (which are unconscious patterns), fallacies are often deliberate or structural errors in how we construct and present arguments.

“A fallacy is the use of invalid or otherwise faulty reasoning in the construction of an argument.”


Categories of Fallacies

Formal Fallacies

Errors in the logical structure itself.

Informal Fallacies

Errors in the content or context of the argument.


Common Fallacies to Document

Appeal to Emotion

  • Appeal to Fear (Argumentum ad Metum)
  • Appeal to Pity (Argumentum ad Misericordiam)
  • Appeal to Ridicule
  • Appeal to Spite

Appeal to Authority / Popularity

  • Appeal to Authority (Argumentum ad Verecundiam)
  • Appeal to Anonymous Authority
  • Appeal to Common Practice
  • Bandwagon Fallacy (Argumentum ad Populum)
  • Appeal to Tradition

Causation Errors

  • Post Hoc Ergo Propter Hoc (After this, therefore because of this)
  • Cum Hoc Ergo Propter Hoc (With this, therefore because of this)
  • Slippery Slope

False Dilemmas

  • False Dichotomy (Either/Or Fallacy)
  • Perfect Solution Fallacy (Nirvana Fallacy)

Relevance Errors

  • Ad Hominem (Attack the person)
  • Appeal to Ignorance (Argumentum ad Ignorantiam)
  • Red Herring (Ignoratio Elenchi)
  • Straw Man
  • Tu Quoque (You too)

Evidence Errors

  • Cherry Picking
  • Confirmation Bias (overlap with biases)
  • Hasty Generalization
  • Anecdotal Evidence
  • Appeal to Probability

Semantic / Linguistic Errors

  • Equivocation
  • Amphiboly
  • Accent Fallacy
  • Quoting Out of Context

Statistical Fallacies

  • Base Rate Fallacy (overlap with biases)
  • Gambler’s Fallacy
  • Regression Fallacy
  • Prosecutor’s Fallacy

Relationship to Cognitive Biases

BiasRelated Fallacy
Confirmation BiasCherry Picking
Availability HeuristicHasty Generalization
Anchoring BiasAppeal to Tradition
Authority BiasAppeal to Authority
Ingroup BiasGenetic Fallacy

Template for Each Fallacy

# [Fallacy Name]
 
**Type:** [Formal / Informal — Category]
**Also Known As:** [Alternative names]
 
## Definition
 
[Clear, concise definition]
 
## Form
 
[Logical structure showing the error]
 
## Examples
 
### Example 1
[Simple example]
 
### Example 2
[Real-world example]
 
### Example 3
[Political/media example]
 
## Why It Persuades
 
[Why does this fallacy work psychologically?]
 
## How to Counter
 
[How to identify and respond to this fallacy]
 
## Related Concepts
 
- [[Cognitive Bias Name]]
- [[Other Fallacy]]
- [[Mental Model]]
 
## References
 
- [Source material]

Index


Part of the Convergence Protocol — Clear thinking for complex times.