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D Question 2 3 pts tend to rely too heavily on sentiment, fear, and desire; the logical error they commit is to replace evidence with feelings. Fallacies of inconsistency Fallacies of support Fallacies of choice Fallacies of emotion 3 pts Question 3 U D Question 4 3 pts A common advertising technique, uses scare tactics to sell products or get people to vote or act a certain way, as a slogan like "Never let them see you sweat" implies. poisoning the well moral equivalence OOO testimonials equivocation 3 pts D Question 5 3 pts Which of the following would indiqate that you may be reading or writing fallacies of choice? the language of certainty: all, every, 100 percent, never, none, cach, always, everywhere hard, even impossible choices: it's either this or that my solution or your hellish problem: my way or the highway All of these choices support for extreme positions: we must [bomb, invade, kill, torture, outlaw, silence, close a factory, fire an employee, censor objectionable material] 3 pts Question 6 3 pts argument focuses closely on its audience and pays special attention to the understanding the values of the audience. Rogerian . Toulmin-Based Middle Ground 3 pts Question 7 ents D Question 7 3 pts An argument that would view the "for and against positions as extreme and would, instead, strive for a practical alternative, is known as a: a Middle Ground Online Toulmin-Based Rogerian D Question 8 3 pts In a Toulmin-based argument, the term used for the evidence that supports a warrant is: support examples backing rebuttal ncements 15 Question 9 3 pts In a Toulmin-based argument, the is the term for the point of view different from yours on the issue or, in other words, the objections to your claim hinking Online rebuttal quer Webex warrant All of these choices D Question 10 3 pts Words like often." typically. most." and "in some cases are known as warrants absolutes Qualifiers metaphors