The Duck That Won the Lottery: 100 New Experiments for the Armchair PhilosopherFrom the author of the "hugely entertaining"(Publishers Weekly) The Pig That Wants to Be Eaten, lessons in debunking the faulty arguments we hear every day This latest book from the pop philosophy author of The Pig That Wants to Be Eaten tackles an endlessly fascinating area of popular debate-the faulty argument. Julian Baggini provides a rapid-fire selection of short, stimulating, and entertaining quotes from a wide range of famous people in politics, the media, and entertainment, including Donald Rumsfeld, Emma Thompson, Tony Blair, Bill Clinton, and Chris Martin. Each entry takes as its starting point an example of highly questionable-though oddly persuasive-reasoning from a broad variety of subjects. As Baggini teases out the logic in the illogical, armchair philosophers and aficionados of the absurd will find themselves nodding their heads as they laugh out loud. The Duck That Won the Lottery is perfect fodder for any cocktail party and pure pleasure for anyone who loves a good brain twister. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 28
Page
... justification The Only Way Is Down - The regressive fallacy You Should Do the Impossible - Ought without can Lumping It All Together - False singulars Love George, Hate Terrorists - False dichotomies Knowledge in Retrospect - Prediction ...
... justification The Only Way Is Down - The regressive fallacy You Should Do the Impossible - Ought without can Lumping It All Together - False singulars Love George, Hate Terrorists - False dichotomies Knowledge in Retrospect - Prediction ...
Page vii
... justification 113 37. The Only Way is Down The regressive fallacy 116 38 . You Should Do the Impossible Ought without can 119 39. Lumping It All Together False singulars 122 40. Love George , Hate Terrorists False dichotomies 125 41 ...
... justification 113 37. The Only Way is Down The regressive fallacy 116 38 . You Should Do the Impossible Ought without can 119 39. Lumping It All Together False singulars 122 40. Love George , Hate Terrorists False dichotomies 125 41 ...
Page 11
... justification . What we need to know is whether the arms dealing is morally justifiable in itself . Like magicians ' tricks , the argument fools us into looking away from where the real sleight of hand is taking place . The plea is ...
... justification . What we need to know is whether the arms dealing is morally justifiable in itself . Like magicians ' tricks , the argument fools us into looking away from where the real sleight of hand is taking place . The plea is ...
Page 39
You have reached your viewing limit for this book.
You have reached your viewing limit for this book.
Page 59
You have reached your viewing limit for this book.
You have reached your viewing limit for this book.
Contents
25 | |
28 | |
31 | |
34 | |
XVI | 37 |
XVII | 40 |
XVIII | 43 |
XIX | 47 |
XX | 50 |
XXI | 54 |
XXII | 57 |
XXIII | 60 |
XXIV | 63 |
XXV | 66 |
XXVI | 69 |
XXVII | 72 |
XXVIII | 75 |
XXIX | 79 |
XXX | 82 |
XXXI | 85 |
XXXII | 88 |
XXXIII | 91 |
XXXIV | 95 |
XXXV | 98 |
XXXVI | 102 |
XXXVII | 106 |
XXXVIII | 110 |
XXXIX | 113 |
XL | 116 |
XLI | 119 |
XLII | 122 |
XLIII | 125 |
XLIV | 128 |
XLV | 131 |
XLVI | 135 |
XLVII | 138 |
XLVIII | 141 |
XLIX | 144 |
L | 147 |
LI | 150 |
LII | 153 |
LIII | 156 |
LIV | 159 |
LXIII | 187 |
LXIV | 190 |
LXV | 193 |
LXVI | 196 |
LXVII | 199 |
LXVIII | 202 |
LXIX | 205 |
LXX | 208 |
LXXI | 211 |
LXXII | 214 |
LXXIII | 217 |
LXXIV | 220 |
LXXV | 223 |
LXXVI | 226 |
LXXVII | 229 |
LXXVIII | 232 |
LXXIX | 235 |
LXXX | 238 |
LXXXI | 241 |
LXXXII | 244 |
LXXXIII | 247 |
LXXXIV | 250 |
LXXXV | 253 |
LXXXVI | 257 |
LXXXVII | 260 |
LXXXVIII | 264 |
LXXXIX | 267 |
XC | 270 |
XCI | 273 |
XCII | 276 |
XCIII | 279 |
XCIV | 283 |
XCV | 286 |
XCVI | 290 |
XCVII | 293 |
XCVIII | 296 |
XCIX | 299 |
C | 302 |
CI | 305 |
CII | 309 |
CIII | 312 |
CIV | 316 |
Other editions - View all
The Duck That Won the Lottery: 100 New Experiments for the Armchair Philosopher Julian Baggini No preview available - 2009 |
The Duck That Won the Lottery: 100 New Experiments for the Armchair Philosopher Julian Baggini No preview available - 2009 |
Common terms and phrases
accept action actually American answer argued argument assume authorities balance become believe better British called cause choice claim clear common sense Consider course critical debate described don't drugs effect error evidence example existence experience explain fact fallacy false feel follow give given happen hard human idea innocent instance Iraq issues It's justified killing kind known laws least less live logic look luck matter mean mistake moral move nature never obvious onnagata opinion person play poor position possible predictions present principle probably problem prove quantum mechanics question rational reason requires responsible result rhetorical rule seems Selective simply someone sometimes sound suggests surely talk tell theory things thought true truth usually women wrong