Avoiding Logical Fallacies in Argumentative Writing MCQs 10 Score: 0 Attempted: 0/10 Subscribe 1. : What is a logical fallacy? (A) A strong supporting argument (B) An emotional appeal (C) An error in reasoning that weakens an argument (D) A factual statement 2. : What is the āstraw manā fallacy? (A) Attacking a simplified version of the opponentās argument (B) Using statistics out of context (C) Ignoring the opponentās point completely (D) Agreeing with the opponent 3. : What fallacy involves attacking the person rather than the argument? (A) Red herring (B) Slippery slope (C) Ad hominem (D) Bandwagon 4. : Which fallacy assumes that just because one event followed another, the first caused the second? (A) Circular reasoning (B) Post hoc ergo propter hoc (C) Hasty generalization (D) False dilemma 5. : What is the āslippery slopeā fallacy? (A) Claiming that one small step will lead to a chain of extreme events (B) Repeating the same argument (C) Refusing to provide evidence (D) Providing unrelated information 6. : Which fallacy presents only two options when more exist? (A) Hasty generalization (B) False dilemma (C) Red herring (D) Begging the question 7. : What is a āred herringā fallacy? (A) A conclusion with no evidence (B) A misleading statement that distracts from the main argument (C) A personal attack (D) A false cause-and-effect statement 8. : Which fallacy involves making a broad conclusion based on little evidence? (A) Bandwagon (B) Circular reasoning (C) Hasty generalization (D) Ad hominem 9. : What does ācircular reasoningā involve? (A) Avoiding the topic entirely (B) Supporting a claim with the claim itself (C) Presenting multiple sides of an argument (D) Using emotional examples 10. : How can writers avoid logical fallacies in their arguments? (A) Use only opinions (B) Stick to emotional appeals (C) Base arguments on evidence and sound reasoning (D) Ignore the opposing side