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Some Fallacies of Reasoning Used in Advertising: A Presentation

Some Fallacies of Reasoning Used in Advertising: A Presentation

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Page 1: Some Fallacies of Reasoning Used in Advertising: A Presentation

SomeFallacies of Reasoning Used in

Advertising: A Presentation

Page 2: Some Fallacies of Reasoning Used in Advertising: A Presentation

What is a fallacy?

A fallacy is simply an error in logical thinking.

It may be accidental or intentional.

If it is intentional, then someone is trying to persuade the listener to think a certain way or do a particular action.

Page 3: Some Fallacies of Reasoning Used in Advertising: A Presentation

How a fallacy works

A fallacy works by leading a listener’s thinking through what appears to be sound or true reasoning to a certain conclusion.

This occurs through a series of connected ideas seemingly stated correctly.

Page 4: Some Fallacies of Reasoning Used in Advertising: A Presentation

Connecting Ideas: Syllogisms

A syllogism is a three part reasoning process.

A syllogism is composed of a major premise (a point or proposal to be discussed), a minor premise, and a conclusion.

Page 5: Some Fallacies of Reasoning Used in Advertising: A Presentation

Syllogism example

Major premise: All TJH students are cool.

Minor premise: Linda is a TJH student.

Conclusion: Linda is cool.

The conclusion seems to follow logically and truthfully; however, the conclusion may be quite false.

Page 6: Some Fallacies of Reasoning Used in Advertising: A Presentation

Syllogism example

The truth stated in a syllogism may persuade someone into agreeing with the conclusion even though it is obviously untrue.

For example, Linda may be a widely known vulgar, uncouth, violent, and ignorant person. Cool? NOT!

Page 7: Some Fallacies of Reasoning Used in Advertising: A Presentation

Advertisers use fallacies.

Advertisers must sell products to stay in business and to earn a living.

Advertisers use syllogisms to convince listeners to buy products whether listeners actually agree or not. Persuasion is the name of the game.

Page 8: Some Fallacies of Reasoning Used in Advertising: A Presentation

Examples of some advertising

“Tiger Woods likes and eats Peanut Crunch Cereal, and you should, too!”

“Michael Jordan says, ‘What are YOU wearing?’ So why aren’t you wearing what he wears?”

“This car is the best there is because you can get it on low installment payments.”

Page 9: Some Fallacies of Reasoning Used in Advertising: A Presentation

Types of Fallacies

A huge number of fallacies are waiting to persuade us into doing what is desired.

They may come from all around us, again, accidentally or intentionally.

The following slides show some common and intentional fallacies used by some advertisers to persuade us to buy products. How many do you recognize?

Page 10: Some Fallacies of Reasoning Used in Advertising: A Presentation

Testimonial

Getting someone well known and popular to appear in a commercial for a product.

Example: Tiger Woods drives a particular SUV. Therefore, if I buy one, I will be as well loved and respected as he is. Example: Vivica A. Fox and Michelle Trachtenberg wear a certain brand of makeup. If I do, too, then I will be as attractive as they are.

Page 11: Some Fallacies of Reasoning Used in Advertising: A Presentation

Bandwagon

Most people think it, so it must be true.

Example: This automobile has been the best selling one in this country for three years now, so you should get one, too.

Page 12: Some Fallacies of Reasoning Used in Advertising: A Presentation

Card Stacking

This one omits facts which do not support its goal.

Example: We compared our car to four competitors, and ours was best in gas mileage by far, so it should be YOUR choice, too!

Page 13: Some Fallacies of Reasoning Used in Advertising: A Presentation

False Dichotomy (Simplification)

This one states only two positions for you to take although others are possible.

Example: Do you want to be fat and gross, or will you eat our sandwich?

Page 14: Some Fallacies of Reasoning Used in Advertising: A Presentation

Circular Reasoning

A conclusion which is the same as the major premise

Example: In a good taste test, people chose our candy as having the best taste because it is so good!

Page 15: Some Fallacies of Reasoning Used in Advertising: A Presentation

Non Sequitar

Conclusion that does not logically follow from the evidence

Example: “With a name like Smuckers it’s got to be good.”

Page 16: Some Fallacies of Reasoning Used in Advertising: A Presentation

Special Pleading (double standard)

Accepting one standard but applying a different one to itself

Example: Men can use any old cleaner, but women need OUR cleaner!

Page 17: Some Fallacies of Reasoning Used in Advertising: A Presentation

Hasty Generalization

Conclusion based on too few examples

Example: Buy Kenmore because you know your mother says it’s the best.

Page 18: Some Fallacies of Reasoning Used in Advertising: A Presentation

Slippery Slope

This one assumes a cause-effect relationship with very suspect connections.

“Because I ate those pretzels, I got a new girlfriend, passed my Algebra test, and found a dollar in the stadium!”

Page 19: Some Fallacies of Reasoning Used in Advertising: A Presentation

Notes

There are nearly 200 identifiable types of fallacies. Those discussed here are just a few obvious examples.

The same fallacy can be identified by different names, depending on your source.

Fallacy examples often overlap with other types of fallacies.

Page 20: Some Fallacies of Reasoning Used in Advertising: A Presentation

Conclusions

Remember that the important thing is to recognize the fallacy so you can know the truth.Because an argument or commercial uses a fallacy does not mean there is no truth being given. It means the fallacy exists and should be pointed out. The real truth should be the focus.

Page 21: Some Fallacies of Reasoning Used in Advertising: A Presentation

The End