Logical Fallacy Identification: Worksheet 2 - Beginner Practice Logical Fallacy Identification BEGINNER

Ready to master Logical Fallacy Identification? This entry level practice worksheet (2/10) presents 20 beginner-level challenges. Focus area: pattern recognition. Learn to solve logical fallacy identification reasoning questions, handle logical fallacy identification practice, and perfect logical fallacy identification for competitive exams with our step-by-step solutions.

📝 Worksheet 2 of 10 • 20 questions • ⏱️ Estimated time: 20 minutes • 🎯 Beginner level

What you'll learn in this worksheet:
Your progress through Logical Fallacy Identification
Worksheet 2 of 10 (11% complete)

Question 1

Statement: 'Everyone I know supports this policy, so it must be the right thing to do' What logical fallacy does this argument contain?
The argument assumes something is correct because many people believe it

Question 2

Statement: 'We should not listen to John's economic advice because he dropped out of college' What logical fallacy does this argument contain?
This attacks the person rather than addressing the merit of the economic advice itself

Question 3

Statement: 'You can't prove that this new medicine is completely safe, so we shouldn't use it' What logical fallacy does this argument contain?
This assumes something is false because it can't be proven true

Question 4

Statement: 'This traditional farming method has been used for centuries, so it must be effective' What logical fallacy does this argument contain?
This assumes something is good simply because it's been done for a long time

Question 5

Statement: 'If we allow students to retake exams, soon they'll expect to retake them indefinitely' What logical fallacy does this argument contain?
This assumes one action will inevitably lead to extreme consequences without evidence

Question 6

Statement: 'We should not listen to John's economic advice because he dropped out of college' What logical fallacy does this argument contain?
This attacks the person rather than addressing the merit of the economic advice itself

Question 7

Statement: 'This traditional farming method has been used for centuries, so it must be effective' What logical fallacy does this argument contain?
This assumes something is good simply because it's been done for a long time

Question 8

Statement: 'If we allow students to retake exams, soon they'll expect to retake them indefinitely' What logical fallacy does this argument contain?
This assumes one action will inevitably lead to extreme consequences without evidence

Question 9

Statement: 'We should not listen to John's economic advice because he dropped out of college' What logical fallacy does this argument contain?
This attacks the person rather than addressing the merit of the economic advice itself

Question 10

Statement: 'If we allow students to retake exams, soon they'll expect to retake them indefinitely' What logical fallacy does this argument contain?
This assumes one action will inevitably lead to extreme consequences without evidence

Question 11

Statement: 'We should not listen to John's economic advice because he dropped out of college' What logical fallacy does this argument contain?
This attacks the person rather than addressing the merit of the economic advice itself

Question 12

Statement: 'Everyone I know supports this policy, so it must be the right thing to do' What logical fallacy does this argument contain?
The argument assumes something is correct because many people believe it

Question 13

Statement: 'If we allow students to retake exams, soon they'll expect to retake them indefinitely' What logical fallacy does this argument contain?
This assumes one action will inevitably lead to extreme consequences without evidence

Question 14

Statement: 'Everyone I know supports this policy, so it must be the right thing to do' What logical fallacy does this argument contain?
The argument assumes something is correct because many people believe it

Question 15

Statement: 'If we allow students to retake exams, soon they'll expect to retake them indefinitely' What logical fallacy does this argument contain?
This assumes one action will inevitably lead to extreme consequences without evidence

Question 16

Statement: 'You can't prove that this new medicine is completely safe, so we shouldn't use it' What logical fallacy does this argument contain?
This assumes something is false because it can't be proven true

Question 17

Statement: 'You can't prove that this new medicine is completely safe, so we shouldn't use it' What logical fallacy does this argument contain?
This assumes something is false because it can't be proven true

Question 18

Statement: 'Everyone I know supports this policy, so it must be the right thing to do' What logical fallacy does this argument contain?
The argument assumes something is correct because many people believe it

Question 19

Statement: 'Everyone I know supports this policy, so it must be the right thing to do' What logical fallacy does this argument contain?
The argument assumes something is correct because many people believe it

Question 20

Statement: 'If we allow students to retake exams, soon they'll expect to retake them indefinitely' What logical fallacy does this argument contain?
This assumes one action will inevitably lead to extreme consequences without evidence
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