Straight and Crooked Thinking

Book by Robert H. Thouless
0-330-24127-3OCLC1230940
Dewey Decimal
160LC ClassBC108 .T48 1974

Straight and Crooked Thinking, first published in 1930 and revised in 1953,[1] is a book by Robert H. Thouless which describes, assesses and critically analyses flaws in reasoning and argument. Thouless describes it as a practical manual, rather than a theoretical one.

Synopsis

Thirty-eight fallacies are discussed in the book. Among them are:

  • No. 3. proof by example, biased sample, cherry picking
  • No. 6. ignoratio elenchi: "red herring"
  • No. 9. false compromise/middle ground
  • No. 12. argument in a circle
  • No. 13. begging the question
  • No. 17. equivocation
  • No. 18. false dilemma: black and white thinking
  • No. 19. continuum fallacy (fallacy of the beard)
  • No. 21. ad nauseam: "argumentum ad nauseam" or "argument from repetition" or "argumentum ad infinitum"
  • No. 25. style over substance fallacy
  • No. 28. appeal to authority
  • No. 31. thought-terminating cliché
  • No. 36. special pleading
  • No. 37. appeal to consequences
  • No. 38. appeal to motive

See also

  • Philosophy portal
  • Psychology portal

References

  1. ^ Thouless, Robert H (1953), Straight and Crooked Thinking (PDF), London: Pan Books, retrieved 30 November 2010