Logos Archives - Writing Commons https://writingcommons.org The encyclopedia for writers Tue, 30 Apr 2024 12:20:51 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://writingcommons.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/cropped-WC-Site-23-32x32.png Logos Archives - Writing Commons https://writingcommons.org 32 32 Fallacious Logos https://writingcommons.org/article/fallacious-logos/ Mon, 16 Apr 2012 15:36:49 +0000 https://transfer.writingcommons.org/2012/04/16/fallacious-logos/
  • Appeal to Nature: Suggesting a certain behavior or action is normal/right because it is "natural." This is a fallacious argument for two reasons: first, there are multiple, and often competing, ways to define "nature" and "natural." Because there is no one way to define these terms, a writer cannot assume his or her reader thinks of "nature" in the same way he or she does. Second, we cannot assume that "unnatural" is the same as wrong or evil. We (humans) have made lots of amendments to how we live (e.g., wearing clothes, living indoors, farming) with great benefit.
  • The post Fallacious Logos appeared first on Writing Commons.]]>
    Logos – Logos Definition https://writingcommons.org/article/logos/ Mon, 16 Apr 2012 15:04:01 +0000 https://transfer.writingcommons.org/2012/04/16/logos/ "Logic is the anatomy of thought."
    – John Locke

    "Logos" is the appeal to logic. Logos isn't logic like the formal logic in math, philosophy, or even computer science; it is the consistency and clarity of an argument as well as the logic of evidence and reasons.

    In formal logic, in abstraction, the following is the case: if A is true and B is true and A is an instance of B, then the repercussions of B will always be true.

    The post Logos – Logos Definition appeared first on Writing Commons.]]>
    Logical Fallacies https://writingcommons.org/section/rhetoric/rhetorical-reasoning/rhetorical-appeals/logos/logical-fallacies/ Mon, 16 Apr 2012 00:04:14 +0000 https://transfer.writingcommons.org/2012/04/16/logical-fallacies/ By now you know that all arguments operate according to an internal logic. No matter which of the four rhetorical appeals the author uses, her thesis will succeed or fail based on the soundness of her argument. In classical logic, an argument is sound only if all of its premises are true and the argument is valid. And an argument is valid only if its conclusion follows logically from the combination of its premises. For example, Plato’s classic syllogism, “All men are mortal; Socrates is a man: therefore, Socrates is mortal” is both valid and sound. Its premises are true, and the conclusion is undeniable given an understanding of the definitions of the terms.

    The post Logical Fallacies appeared first on Writing Commons.]]>