An appeal to popularity, also called argumentum ad populum (Latin for "appeal to the people"), is a logical fallacy. It happens when someone tries to argue that something is right because lots of people believe in it.[1]
An example is saying "many people buy extended warranties, therefore we should buy one for our new computer".
Related pages
References
|
|---|
| Informal | | Equivocation | |
|---|
| Question-begging | |
|---|
| Correlative-based | |
|---|
| Illicit transference | |
|---|
| Secundum quid |
- Accident
- Converse accident
|
|---|
| Faulty generalization |
- Sampling bias
- Argument from analogy
- Anecdotal evidence
- Base rate / Conjunction
- Double counting
- Slothful induction
- Overwhelming exception
|
|---|
| Ambiguity | |
|---|
| Questionable cause | |
|---|
| Appeals |
- Law/Legality
- Stone / Proof by assertion
| Consequences | |
|---|
| Emotion |
- Children
- Fear
- Flattery
- Novelty
- Pity
- Ridicule
- In-group favoritism
- Invented here / Not invented here
- Island mentality
- Loyalty
- Parade of horribles
- Spite
- Stirring symbols
- Wisdom of repugnance
|
|---|
|
|---|
| Genetic fallacy | |
|---|
Other fallacies of relevance | |
|---|
|
|---|
| Formal | | In propositional logic |
Affirming a disjunct
Affirming the consequent
Denying the antecedent
Argument from fallacy
Masked man
Mathematical fallacy
|
|---|
| In quantificational logic |
- Existential
- Illicit conversion
- Proof by example
- Quantifier shift
|
|---|
| Syllogistic fallacy |
- Affirmative conclusion from a negative premise
- Negative conclusion from affirmative premises
- Exclusive premises
- Existential
- Necessity
- Four terms
- Illicit major
- Illicit minor
- Undistributed middle
|
|---|
|
|---|