- Questionable cause
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Fallacies of questionable cause, also known as causal fallacies, non causa pro causa ("non-cause for cause" in Latin) or false cause, are informal fallacies where a cause is incorrectly identified. These include:
- Correlation implies causation (cum hoc, ergo propter hoc)
- Fallacy of the single cause
- Circular cause and consequence
- Spurious relationship
- Third-cause fallacy
- Post hoc ergo propter hoc
- Regression fallacy
- Texas sharpshooter fallacy
- Wrong direction
Informal fallacies Absence paradox · Begging the question · Blind men and an elephant · Cherry picking · Complex question · False analogy · Fallacy of distribution (Composition · Division) · Furtive fallacy · Hasty generalization · I'm entitled to my opinion · Loaded question · McNamara fallacy · Name calling · Nirvana fallacy · Rationalization (making excuses) · Red herring fallacy · Special pleading · Slothful inductionCorrelative-based fallacies Deductive fallacies Inductive fallacies Vagueness and ambiguity Equivocation Questionable cause Animistic · Appeal to consequences · Argumentum ad baculum · Correlation does not imply causation (Cum hoc) · Gambler's fallacy and its inverse · Post hoc · Prescience · Regression · Single cause · Slippery slope · Texas sharpshooter · The Great Magnet · Unknown Root · Wrong directionList of fallacies · Other types of fallacyExternal links
- Non Causa Pro Causa in the Fallacy Files by Gary N. Curtis
Categories:- Causal fallacies
- Informal fallacies
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