Book Review: With Good Reason: An Introduction to Informal Fallacies by S. Morris Engel.
Many are familiar with deductive
arguments (where the conclusion necessarily follows from the premises) and
inductive arguments (where the conclusion follows from the premises with a
varying degree of probability and strength). But how well acquainted is one with
“seductive”(40) arguments?
“Seductive” arguments are another name for informal fallacies, the subject S. Morris Engel takes up in his excellent book entitledWith Good Reason: An Introduction to Informal Fallacies. In addition to the great content one will find in each chapter, the book is full of exercises (with an answer key at the end of each chapter for selected questions), diagrams, cartoons, and examples to help illustrate and reinforce the various points being made throughout the book on fallacies.
The book is divided into two parts: “Logic and Language” and “Informal Fallacies.” Apologetics 315.
“Seductive” arguments are another name for informal fallacies, the subject S. Morris Engel takes up in his excellent book entitledWith Good Reason: An Introduction to Informal Fallacies. In addition to the great content one will find in each chapter, the book is full of exercises (with an answer key at the end of each chapter for selected questions), diagrams, cartoons, and examples to help illustrate and reinforce the various points being made throughout the book on fallacies.
The book is divided into two parts: “Logic and Language” and “Informal Fallacies.” Apologetics 315.
