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Critical Thinking
Question | Answer |
---|---|
The term "fake news" refers to news stories that… | Are deliberately false or misleading |
The attitude requiring that we reject the habit of automatically accepting claims found in the media or online is called… | Reasonable skepticism |
The fact that fake news can endanger innocent lives is illustrated by? | The "Pizzagate" incident |
In addition to endangering innocent lives, fake news harms society by | Sewing distrust and exaggerating social conflicts |
Characteristics of trustworthy fact checkers include | Disclosing their sources of funding |
Websites like AllSides.com and ProCon.org are useful aides for | Lateral reading |
In order to read a news source critically, we must ask ourselves if the claims we encounter have been examined by fact checkers, are plausible, and… | Are supported by evidence |
Fake news articles often succeed because… | People desire evidence that supports their beliefs |
Lateral reading involves… | Comparing a variety of sources |
Reverse image searches are most useful for… | Checking if an image has been used before |
Our guiding attitude toward the world of advertising should be one of… | Reasonable skepticism |
Advertisers use weasel words to… | Appear to make strong claims without lying |
Ads that depend for their effectiveness on not looking like ads are called… | Native ads |
All of the following are old school advertising tricks except… | Splicing |
This ad—"You may have already won a new 2020 Ford pickup truck!"—illustrates the use of… | Weasel words |
This ad—"Big sale! Apple iPad for less than the suggested retail price!" —illustrates the use of… | Misleading comparisons |
The presidential election between Lyndon B. Johnson and Barry Goldwater marked the beginning of… | Negative political ads |
Today, the go-to tactic for political smearing, propaganda, and hatchet jobs is… | The use of manipulated videos |
Cropping, changing speed, dubbing audio, and adding or deleting visual information are all methods of the specific technique known as… | Doctoring |
A photoshopped gif circulated on social media showing Parkland student and gun-control advocate Emma Gonzalez ripping the U.S. Constitution illustrates the specific technique known as… | Doctoring |
Inference to the best explanation is a form of inductive reasoning in which we reason from premises about a state of affairs to... | An explanation for that state of affairs |
Before evaluating a theory, we should make sure that it meets the minimum requirement of... | Consistency |
An inference to the best explanation always goes "beyond the evidence"—it tries to explain facts but does so by... | Positing a theory that is not derived entirely from those facts |
A theory that is internally consistent is free of... | Contradictions |
The standards used to judge the worth of explanatory theories are known as... | The criteria of adequacy |
A hypothesis that cannot be verified independently of the phenomenon it is supposed to explain is said to be... | Ad hoc |
A theory with scope is one that explains or predicts phenomena... | Other than that which it was introduced to explain |
If a theory predicts something other than what it was introduced to explain, it is... | Testable |
A theory that fits with our established beliefs is... | Conservative |
The criteria of adequacy include... | Testability, scope, conservatism |
The standard moral argument is a mixture of... | Moral and nonmoral statements |
The best approach to identifying implicit premises is to treat moral arguments as... | Deductive |
We can evaluate a moral premise by... | Trying to think of counterexamples to it |
A moral theory tries to explain... | What makes an action right or what makes a person good |
Considered moral judgments are... | Those moral judgments that we accept after we reason about them carefully |
In moral arguments, a moral conclusion cannot be established without… | A moral premise |
Subjective relativism implies that each person is... | Morally infallible |
Social relativism implies that it is impossible to disagree with one's culture and be... | Right |
According to Kantian ethics, an action is right if it... | Conforms to universal moral rules derived from reason |
According to traditional utilitarianism, an action is right if it... | Maximizes overall happiness, everyone considered |
what is a conspiracy theory? | a belief that’s kind of based on events going on, but it can really be something plotted by a group of people for their own reasons. |
Why are conspiracy theories so appealing? | are appealing because of anxiety and fear, social identity, coping mechanism and for entertainment purpose. For curiosity and projection. |
Circular Reasoning | basically, when the argument is restated rather than proven. Example would be “The wind is invisible because I can’t see it because it’s invisible. |
Hasty Generalization | when someone is making a sweeping statement without considering the facts. |
Slippery Slope | is when a conclusion is based on the premise that one small step will lead to a chain of events resulting in some significant event. Example would be “If you don’t study on Saturdays, your grades will suffer.” |
Straw Man | the distortion of someone else's argument to make it easier to attack or refute. |
Ad Hominem | is when an attack on a person’s character or personal attributes to discredit their argument. |
False Dichotomy | When an argument presents two points while disregarding or ignoring others to narrow the argument in one person’s favor. |
Appeal to Emotion | is when a writer or speaker uses emotion-based language to try to persuade the reader or listener of a certain belief or position. “I deserve a second chance to submit my assignment.” |
Equivocation | When an argument is presented in an ambiguous, double -sided way, making the argument misleading. Example would be “Hot dogs are better than nothing.” |
Bandwagon Appeal | presents the thoughts of a group of people to persuade someone to think the same way. Example would be” many people buy extended warranties; therefore, it’s wise to buy them.” |
False Analogy | when two things that are unalike are being compared based on a trivial similarity in order to prove a point. Example would be “People are like dogs.” |