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When is an argument considered to be a logical fallacy?

When the argument doesn't make sense
When an illogical premise is presented with logical supporting information
When there is a logical premise without data to support it
When a logical premise is supported by very general claims
When the author or speaker is not a credible representative of the topic
When a logical premise is supported by claims that don't address the argument's point
When certain claims only seem to lead to other, unsupported claims

1 Answer

2 votes
okay so B, When an illogical premise is presented with logical supporting information. The others don't seem to really make much sense at all that's why.
User Phusick
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