Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Thus the hound of heaven, arguing fallaciously from his own secret aspirations.
It is a democratic majority objecting to what is being done, quite fallaciously, in the name of democracy.
Although certain classes of argument from authority can constitute strong inductive arguments, the appeal to authority is often applied fallaciously.
Yet, it is Thornhill and Palmer who are thinking fallaciously by using the naturalistic fallacy in this way."
The only members who have lost membership because of testimony were those who were found, after thorough investigation, to have testified inaccurately or fallaciously.
He that uses the word body sometimes for pure extension, and sometimes for extension and solidity together, will talk very fallaciously.
Of course, many employees are placated by the fact that an employee sits there with the executives and believe fallaciously that their interests are being looked after.
It is lamentable that the only valid point Mr. Abu-Lughod introduces is fallaciously attributed to the Palestinian nationalist movement.
As participants in the L3 forum discussed these maps, they realized that the link had only been sent to those who had filled in the form incompletely or fallaciously.
According to Salmon, the ontological argument for God's existence fallaciously assumes that "The F is F" is a truth of logic, or an analytic truth.
The Professional Occupational Safety Hazard (P.O.S.H.) team fallaciously investigates safety violations and accidents.
The converse of this fallacy is called fallacy of composition, which arises when one fallaciously attributes a property of some part of a thing to the thing as a whole.
The reason is simple enough since even the poorest Sarkite is an aristocrat in comparison with Florinians and can consider himself, however fallaciously, to be a member of a ruling class.
He argued that psychometricians have fallaciously reified the g factor as a physical thing in the brain, even though it is simply the product of statistical calculations (i.e., factor analysis).
Survivorship bias (or survivor bias) is a statistical artifact in applications outside finance, where studies on the remaining population are fallaciously compared with the historic average despite the survivors having unusual properties.
And all the great writers of our time represent in one form or another this attempt to re-establish communication with the elemental, or, as it is sometimes more roughly and fallaciously expressed, to return to nature.
Let not men then in the pride of power, use the same arguments that tyrannic kings and venal ministers have used, and fallaciously assert that woman ought to be subjected because she has always been so.
Decisions and conclusions made on the basis of "the squeaky wheel gets the grease" may be reached fallaciously if one assumes a problem will out itself with contrary evidence rather than finding positive evidence to support a conclusion.
This could fallaciously inflect that the three have an ancient common origin, whereas in fact the three developed mutually over millennia by diffusion, assimilation, scholarship, and trade across the whole of Eurasia and Africa.
They regarded themselves, however fallaciously, as light-skinned; in their paintings they were invariably shown full face and almost white, whereas their enemies were always depicted in profile and black, unless they were Europeans.
It is under this aspect that the relationship between Marx and Hegel has generally been ignored, ill understood or even denounced as the weak point of what has been fallaciously transformed into a Marxist dogma.
Poor baby Bryant, sitting home this month while basketball fans pay attention to LeBron James, decided the Lakers weren't rebuilding fast enough the three-championship dynasty he fallaciously claims he had no role in dismantling.
But showing how one argument in a complex thesis is fallaciously reasoned does not necessarily invalidate the proof; the complete proof could still logically imply its conclusion if that conclusion is not dependent on the fallacy:
He had the sinecure post of 'Trumpeter to the Queen,' and claimed fallaciously the office, as hereditary in his family for many generations, of 'Bowbearer of the Forest of Bowland,' Lancashire.