Microsoft Word - Final PDFs © Hans V. Hansen & Cameron Fioret. Infomal Logic, Vol. 36, No. 4 (2016), pp. 432-472. A Searchable Bibliography of Fallacies – 2016 HANS V. HANSEN Department of Philosophy University of Windsor Windsor, ON CANADA N9B 3P4 hhansen@uwindsor.ca CAMERON FIORET Department of Philosophy University of Guelph Guelph, ON CANADA N1G 2W1 fioretc@uoguelph.ca This bibliography of literature on the fallacies is intended to be a resource for argumentation theorists. It incorporates and sup- plements the material in the bibliography in Hansen and Pinto’s Fallacies: Classical and Contemporary Readings (1995), and now includes over 550 entries. The bibliography is here present- ed in electronic form which gives the researcher the advantage of being able to do a search by any word or phrase of interest. Moreover, all the entries have been classified under at least one of 45 categories indicated below. Using the code, entered as e.g., ‘[AM-E]’, one can select all the entries that have been des- ignated as being about the ambiguity fallacy, equivocation. Literature about fallacies falls into two broad classes. It is either about fallacies in general (fallacy theory, or views about fallacies) or about particular fallacies (e.g., equivocation, appeal to pity, etc.). The former category includes, among others, con- siderations of the importance of fallacies, the basis of fallacies, the teaching of fallacies, etc. These general views about fallacies often come from a particular theoretical orientation about how fallacies are best understood; for example, some view fallacies as epistemological mistakes, some as mistakes in disagreement resolution, others as frustrations of rhetorical practice and com- munication. Accordingly, we have attempted to classify the en- Hansen & Fioret © Hans V. Hansen & Cameron Fioret. Infomal Logic, Vol. 36, No. 4 (2016), pp. 432-472. 433 tries about fallacies in general under one of several possible per- spectives, but a given classifications is only an indication of the approach taken in the work, it does not imply that the entry is not relevant to other perspective on fallacies. If fallacy-research is not about fallacies in general, it is about particular fallacies (e.g., equivocation, secundum quid, etc.), or particular kinds of fallacies (e.g., mathematical falla- cies). We have decided on some 40 categories for classifying individual fallacies. There are also some other particular useful categories; for example, one indicating that the entry is devoted to a historical treatment of fallacies, the other an index of other bibliographies on fallacies. This is a work in progress which will lend itself to correc- tion in future versions by those who make use of it. We sincere- ly hope that readers will bring to our attention any of the mis- takes in the present version. The kinds of mistakes we anticipate are: (i) mistakes in an entry (author(s), title, medium, date, pag- es, etc.); (ii) the inclusion of something that should not be in this bibliography; (iii) the failure to include something that should have been included in the bibliography; (iv) a mis-classification of an entry; and (v) a failure to add a useful classification code to an entry. (An entry can have more than one index code.) For their help in developing the present version of the bib- liography, we are very grateful to Andrew Aberdein, Maurice Finocchiaro, and Ralph H. Johnson. Coding key – Code to Subject PERSPECTIVES ON FALLACIES GF-N Fallacies (theory) in general / no evident perspective GF-C Fallacy taxonomies / classification GF-D Fallacies (theory) – dialectical / dialogical perspective GF-E Fallacies (theory) – alethic / logical /epistemic perspective GF-F Fallacies (theory) -- formal (logic) perspective GF-T Fallacies (theory) – pedagogical perspective / issues GF-R Fallacies (theory) – rhetorical perspective GF-P Fallacies (theory) – sociological-gender-psychological perspective GF-V Fallacies (fallacy theory) – virtue/vice perspective A Searchable Bibliography of Fallacies © Hans V. Hansen & Cameron Fioret. Infomal Logic, Vol. 36, No. 4 (2016), pp. 432-472. 434 PARTICULAR, OR KINDS OF, FALLACIES AA (Fallacious) Appeals to authority (includes fallacious ad verecundiam) AB Ad baculum AC Ad consequentiam (fallacious appeal to consequences) AT Accent AD Accident AH-N Ad hominem in general / no discrimination AH-A Ad hominem abusive AH-C Ad hominem circumstantial AH-L Ad hominem Lockean AH-Q Ad hominem tu quoque AI Ad ignorantiam AM-A Ambiguity – Amphiboly AM-E Ambiguity – Equivocation CF Collection. Includes papers/ chapters on fallacies BR Base rate fallacy BT Textbook with significant attention to fallacies BQ Begging the question / Circular reasoning CM Composition / combination DI Division (parts and words) FA Faulty analogy FB Biased sample / Biased reasoning FC Causal fallacies (post hoc, false cause, common cause) FD False disjunction (dichotomy, alternatives) FF Formal fallacy / fallacies FG Genetic fallacy FI Intentional fallacy Hansen & Fioret © Hans V. Hansen & Cameron Fioret. Infomal Logic, Vol. 36, No. 4 (2016), pp. 432-472. 435 PARTICULAR, OR KINDS OF, FALLACIES FK Conjunction fallacy FM Mathematical fallacy / fallacies FN Naturalistic fallacy FQ Many questions FR Gamblerʼs fallacy FX Gender related fallacy / fallacies HG Hasty generalization HIS Historical studies – modern work on historical expositions of fallacies IE Ignoratio elenchi / Strawman MIS Ad misericordiam OB Other fallacy bibliographies POP Ad populum SB Shifting the burden of proof illicitly ScF Scope fallacy SQ Secundum quid (fallacies dependent on qualifications) SS Slippery slope SF Statistical fallacy XX Cannot classify YY Should not be included in this bib ALTA Proceedings: Proceedings of the NCA/AFA (National Communication Association/ American Forensic Association) Summer Conferences on Argumentation held at Alta, Utah, can be accessed through . ALTA 8 (1993) R.E. McKerrow, Ed. Argument and the Post- modern Challenge. Annandale, VA: Speech Communica- tion Association. A Searchable Bibliography of Fallacies © Hans V. Hansen & Cameron Fioret. Infomal Logic, Vol. 36, No. 4 (2016), pp. 432-472. 436 ALTA 12 (2002) G.T. Goodnight, Ed. Arguing Communication & Culture. Washington, DC: NCA. ALTA 13 (2003) C.A. Willard, Ed. Critical Problems in Argu- mentation. Washington, DC: NCA. ALTA 15 (2007) S. Jacobs, Ed. Concerning Argument. Wash- ington DC: NCA. ECA 1 (2016): Argumentation and Reasoned Action, Proceed- ings of the First European Conference on Argumentation, Lisbon 2015, Dima Mohammed and Marcin Lewiński, Eds. London: College Publications. (Bound in 2 volumes.) ISSA Proceedings: The conference proceedings of the Inter- national Society for the Study of Argumentation (ISSA) can be accessed through the following works. ISSA 1 (1986) Proceedings of the First International Confer- ence on Argumentation F.H. van Eemeren, R. Grooten- dorst, J.A. Blair & C.A. Willard, Eds. Dordrecht: Foris, 1987. (Bound in three volumes.) ISSA 1 Argumentation: Across the Lines of Discipline. ISSA 1A Argumentation: Perspectives and Approaches ISSA 1B Argumentation: Analysis and Practices. ISSA 2 (1990) Proceedings of the Second International Con- ference on Argumentation, F.H. van Eemeren, R. Grooten- dorst, J.A. Blair & C.A. Willard, Eds. Amsterdam: SicSat, 1991. (Bound in two volumes.) ISSA 3 (1994) Proceedings of the Third International Confer- ence on Argumentation, F.H. van Eemeren, R. Grooten- dorst, J.A. Blair & C.A. Willard, Eds. Amsterdam: SicSat, 1995. (Bound in four volumes) ISSA 3A Perspectives and Approaches. (vol. 1) ISSA 3B Analysis and Evaluation. (vol. 2) ISSA 3C Reconstruction and Application (vol. 3) SSA 3D Special Fields and Cases (vol. 4) ISSA 4 (1998) Proceedings of the Fourth Conference of the International Society for the Study of Argumentation, F.H. van Eemeren, R. Grootendorst, J.A. Blair & C.A. Willard, Eds. Amsterdam: SicSat, 1999. ISSA 5 (2002) Proceedings of the Fifth Conference of the In- ternational Society for the Study of Argumentation. F.H. van Eemeren, J.A. Blair, C.A. Willard & A.F. Snoeck Hen- kemans, Eds. Amsterdam: SicSat, 2003. Hansen & Fioret © Hans V. Hansen & Cameron Fioret. Infomal Logic, Vol. 36, No. 4 (2016), pp. 432-472. 437 ISSA 6 (2006) Proceedings of the Sixth Conference of the In- ternational Society for the Study of Argumentation. F.H. van Eemeren, J.A. Blair, C.A. Willard & B. Garssen, Eds. Amsterdam: SicSat, 2007. (Bound in to volumes.) ISSA 7 (2010) Proceedings of the Seventh Conference of the International Society for the Study of Argumentation. F.H. van Eemeren, B. Garssen, D. Godden & G. Mitchell, Eds. Amsterdam: SicSat, 2007. [Compact Disc] ISSA 8 (2014) Proceedings of the Eighth Conference of the International Society for the Study of Argumentation, B. Garssen, D. Godden, G. Mitchell & A.F. Snoeck Henke- mans, Eds. Amsterdam: SicSat, 2015. [Compact Disc] OSSA Proceedings: The collected proceedings of the Ontario Society for the Study of Argumentation (OSSA) can be ac- cessed through the http://scholar.uwindsor.ca/ossaarchive/. OSSA 1 (1995) Argumentation and Education. Hans V. Han- sen & Christopher W. Tindale, Eds. Informal Logic 17:2. OSSA 2 (1997) Argumentation and Rhetoric. Hans V. Han- sen, Christopher W. Tindale & Athena V. Colman, Eds. (St Catharines: OSSA, 1998) OSSA 3 (1999) Argumentation at the Centuryʼs Turn. Christo- pher W. Tindale, Hans V. Hansen & Elmar Sveda, Eds. (St. Catharines: OSSA, 2000) OSSA 4 (2001) Argumentation and its Applications. Hans V. Hansen, Christopher W. Tindale, J. Anthony Blair, Ralph H. Johnson & Robert C. Pinto, Eds. (Windsor: OSSA, 2002) OSSA 5 (2003) Informal Logic @ 25. J. Anthony Blair, Daniel Farr, Hans V. Hansen, Ralph H. Johnson & Christopher W. Tindale, Eds. (Windsor: OSSA) OSSA 6 (2005) The Uses of Argument. David Hitchcock & Daniel Farr, Eds. (Hamilton: OSSA) OSSA 7 (2007) Dissensus & The Search for Common Ground. Hans V. Hansen, Christopher W. Tindale, J. An- thony Blair, Ralph H. Johnson & David M. Godden, Eds. (Windsor: OSSA) OSSA 8 (2009) Argument Cultures. Juho Ritola, Ed. (Wind- sor: OSSA) OSSA 9 (2011) Argumentation: Cognition & Community. Frank Zenker, Ed. (Windsor: OSSA) OSSA 10 (2013) Virtues of Argumentation. Dima Mohammed & Marcin Lewinski, Eds. 
(Windsor: OSSA) OSSA 11 (2016) Argumentation, Objectivity and Bias. Patrick Bondy & Laura Benacquista, Eds. (Windsor: OSSA) A Searchable Bibliography of Fallacies © Hans V. Hansen & Cameron Fioret. Infomal Logic, Vol. 36, No. 4 (2016), pp. 432-472. 438 A Searchable Bibliography of Fallacies, 2016 HANS V. HANSEN & CAMERON FIORET ABATE, CHARLES J., 1979, “Fallacies and invalidity,” Philoso- phy & Rhetoric, 12: 262-6. [GF-N] ABERDEIN, ANDREW, 2007, “Fallacies in mathematics,” Proc. of the British Society for Research into Learning Mathematics, 27: 1-6. [FM] —, 2013, “Fallacy and argumentational vice,” OSSA 10. [GF-V] —, 2014, “In defence of virtue: The legitimacy of agent-based argument appraisal,” Informal Logic 34: 77–93. [GF-V] —, forthcoming, “The vices of argument,” Topoi [GF-V] ACHOURIOTI, THEODORA, 2007, “Fallacies and context- dependence: Considering the strategic maneuvering ap- proach,” ISSA 6: 21-5. [GF-D] ADLER, JONATHAN E., 1993, “Critique of an epistemic account of fallacies,” Argumentation, 7: 263-72, [Criticism of Fogelin and Duggan 1987]. [GF-E] __, 1994, “Fallacies and alternative interpretations,” Australa- sian J. of Philosophy, 72: 271-82. [GF-E] __, 1996, “Charity, interpretation, fallacy,” Philosophy & Rhet- oric, 29: 329-43. [GF-E] __, 1997, “If the base rate fallacy is a fallacy, does it matter how frequently it is committed?” Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 20: 774-5. [BR] __, 2000, “Belief and negation,” Informal Logic, 20: 207-22. [ScF] __, 2007, “Conversation and dissemblance,” in Hansen and Pin- to 2007, 201-12. [FQ] AIKIN, SCOTT, 2008, “Tu quoque arguments and the significance of hypocrisy,” Informal Logic 28:155-69. [AH-Q] __, 2016, “A (modest) defence of fallacy theory,” OSSA 11. [GF-N] AIKIN, SCOTT, and JOHN CASEY, 2013, “Don’t feed the trolls: straw men and iron men,” OSSA 10. [IE] __, forthcoming, “Straw men, iron men, and argumentative vir- tue,” Topoi, [IE] ANGER, BEVERLEY, and CATHERINE HUNDLEBY, forthcoming, “Ad stuprum: The fallacy of appeal to sex,” OSSA 11. [FX] Hansen & Fioret © Hans V. Hansen & Cameron Fioret. Infomal Logic, Vol. 36, No. 4 (2016), pp. 432-472. 439 BACHMAN, JAMES, 1995, “Appeal to authority,” In Hansen and Pinto, 1995, 274-86. [AA] BACK, ALLAN, 1987, “Philoponus on the fallacy of accident,” Ancient Philosophy, 7: 131-46. [AD] [HIS __, 2009, “Mistakes of reason: Practical reasoning and the falla- cy of accident,” Phronesis, 54: 101-35. [AD] BAGWELL, GEOFFREY, 2011, “Does Plato argue fallaciously at Cratylus 385b–c?” Apeiron, 44: 13-21. [HIS] BALL, ANDREW, forthcoming, “Are fallacies vices?” Topoi, [GF-V] BARBEAU, E. J., 2000, “Mathematical fallacies, flaws, and flim- flam,” Mathematical Association of America, Washington D. C. [FM] [SF] BAR-HILLEL, YEHOSHUA, 1964, “More on the fallacy of compo- sition,” Mind, 73:125-6, [CM] [Reply to Rowe 1962]. BARKER, JOHN A., 1976, “The fallacy of begging the question,” Dialogue, 15: 241-55. [BQ] __, 1978, “The nature of question-begging arguments,” Dia- logue, 17: 490-8. [BQ] BARTH, E. M., and J. L. MARTENS, 1977, “Argumentum ad hom- inem: from chaos to formal dialectic,” Logique et Analyse, 20: 76-96. [AH-L] BASU, DILIP K., 1986, “A question of begging,” Informal Logic, 8: 19-26, [Reply to Woods and Walton 1982b]. [BQ] __, 1994, “Begging the question, circularity and epistemic pro- priety,” Argumentation, 8: 217-26. [BQ] BATTERSBY, MARK, and SHARON BAILIN, 2011, “Fallacy identi- fication in a dialectical approach to teaching critical think- ing,” OSSA 9. [GF-T] [GF-D] BEHLING, RICHARD W., 1987, “On the naming of formal falla- cies,” International Logic Review, 18: 69-70. [Reply to Wertz 1985]. [FF] BENCIVENGA, ERMANNO, 1979, “On good and bad arguments,” J. of Philosophical Logic, 8: 247-59. [Reply to Massey's 1975 papers] [GF-E] VAN BENTHAM, JOHAN, FRANS H. VAN EEMEREN, ROB GROOTENDORST and FRANK VELTMAN (eds.), 1996, Logic and Argumentation, Amsterdam: Royal Netherlands Acade- my of Arts and Sciences. [CF] BERMAN, MICHAEL P, and BRIAN A. LIGHTBODY, 2010, “The metaphoric fallacy to a deductive inference,” Informal Logic, 30: 185-93. [FA] A Searchable Bibliography of Fallacies © Hans V. Hansen & Cameron Fioret. Infomal Logic, Vol. 36, No. 4 (2016), pp. 432-472. 440 BIRO, J. I., 1977, “Rescuing ‘begging the question’,” Metaphilosophy, 8: 257-71. [BQ] __, 1984, “Knowability, believability and begging the question: a reply to Sanford,” Metaphilosophy, 15: 239-47. [BQ] __, 1987, “A sketch of an epistemic theory of fallacies,” in ISSA 1B: 65-73. [GF-E], BIRO, JOHN and HARVEY SIEGEL, 1992, “Normativity, argumen- tation and an epistemic theory of fallacies,” in ISSA 1B: 85- 103. [GF-E] BLAIR, J. ANTHONY, 1995, “The place of teaching informal fal- lacies in teaching reasoning skills or critical thinking,” in Hansen and Pinto 1995, 328-38. [GF-T] BLAIR, J. ANTHONY, and RALPH H. JOHNSON, (eds.), 1980, In- formal Logic: The FirstInternational Symposium, Inverness, Calif.: Edgepress,] (Selected papers from the First Interna- tional Symposium on Informal Logic). [CF] __, 1987, “The current state of informal logic and critical think- ing,” Informal Logic, 9: 147-51. [GF-E] __, 1991, “Misconceptions of informal logic: A reply to McPeck,” Teaching Philosophy, 14: 35-52, [GF-N] (Reply to McPeck 1991). BOGER, GEORGE, 2003, “Formal logic’s contribution to the study of fallacies,” ISSA 5: 133-7. [FF] BOKMELDER, DMITRI, 2015, “Cogntiive biases and logical falla- cies,” ISSA 8: 147-53. BONDY, PATRICK, 2016, “Bias in legitimate ad hominem argu- ments,” OSSA 11. [AH-N] [FB] BONEVAC, DANIEL, JOSH DEVER, and DAVID SOSA, 2011, “The counterexample fallacy,” Mind, 120: 1143-58. [SF] BOONE, DANIEL N., 2002, “The cogent reasoning model of in- formal fallacies revisited,” Informal Logic, 22: 93-111. [GF- E] BOTTING, DAVID, 2012, “Fallacies of accident,” Argumentation, 26: 267-89. [AD] __, 2012, “What is a sophistical refutation?” Argumentation, 26: 213-32. [GF-D] __, 2014, “Without qualification: An inquiry into the secundum quid,” Studies in Logic, Grammar and Rhetoric, 38: 161-70. [SQ] BOUDRY, MAARTEN, FABIO PAGLIERI, and MASSIMO PIGLIUCCI, 2015, “The fake, the flimsy, and the fallacious: Demarcating arguments in real life,” Argumentation, 29: 431-456. [GF-N] Hansen & Fioret © Hans V. Hansen & Cameron Fioret. Infomal Logic, Vol. 36, No. 4 (2016), pp. 432-472. 441 BRINTON, ALAN, 1985, “A rhetorical view of the ad hominem,” Australasian J. of Philosophy, 63: 50-63. [AH-N] __, 1992, “The ad baculum re-clothed,” Informal Logic, 14:85- 92, [AB] (Disagrees with some conclusions in Wreen 1987b, 1988a, 1988b, 1989). __, 1994, “A plea for argumentum ad misericordiam,” Philoso- phia, 23: 25-44. [MIS] __, 1995, “The ad hominem,” in Hansen and Pinto 1995, 197- 212. [AH-N] BROAD, C. D., 1950, “Some common fallacies in political think- ing,” Philosophy, 25: 99-113. [GF-N]. BROYLES, JAMES E., 1975, “The fallacies of composition and division,” Philosophy & Rhetoric, 8: 108-13. [CM] [DI] BUENO, ANIBEL A., 1988, “Aristotle, the fallacy of accident, and the nature of predication: a historical inquiry,” J. of the His- tory of Philosophy, 26: 5-24. [AD] [HIS] BUNCH, BRYAN, 1997, Mathematical Fallacies and Paradoxes, New York: Dover Publications. [FM] BURKE, MICHAEL, 1994, “Denying the antecedent,” Informal Logic, 16: 23-30. [FF] CAPALDI, NICHOLAS, 1973, The Art of Deception, Buffalo: Pro- metheus Books. [BT] CARROLL, NOËL, 1997, “The intentional fallacy: defending my- self,” J. of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, 55.3: 305-9. [FI] CARROLL, ROBERT, 2013, The Critical Thinker’s Dictionary: Biases, Fallacies, and Illusions and What You Can Do About Them, Amazon: Kindle Ebook. [BT] CHATHAM, CHRISTOPHER HUGHES, 2013, “The consistency fal- lacy and failures of theory embellishment,” Frontiers in Psy- chology, 4: 965. [GF-P] CIURRIA, MICHELLE, and KHAMEIEL ALTAMIMI, 2014, “Argu- mentum ad vericundiam: new gender based criteria for ap- peals to authority,” Argumentation, 28: 437-52. [AA] [FX] COHEN, DANIEL H., 2003, “Logical fallacies, dialectical trans- gressions, rhetorical sins, and other failures of rationality in argumentation,” ISSA 5: 201-6. [GF-N] COHEN, L. JONATHAN, 1979, “On the psychology of prediction: whose is the fallacy?” Cognition, 7: 385-407. [GF-P] __, 1980, “Whose is the fallacy: a rejoinder to Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky,” Cognition, 8: 89-92. [GF-P] __, 1982, “Are people programmed to commit fallacies?” J. for the Theory of Social Behaviour, 12: 251-74. [GF-P] A Searchable Bibliography of Fallacies © Hans V. Hansen & Cameron Fioret. Infomal Logic, Vol. 36, No. 4 (2016), pp. 432-472. 442 COLE, RICHARD, 1965, “A note on informal fallacies,” Mind, 74: 432-3. [GF-E] COLEMAN, EDWIN, 1995, “There is no fallacy of arguing from authority,” Informal Logic, 17: 365-383. [AA] __, 2007, “Mediated Fallacies,” ISSA 6: 265-9. (Some fallacies are dependent on the medium in which they occur.) [XX] COLLINS, JOHN M., 2011, “Agent-relative fallacies,” ISSA 7: 281-8. [XX] COLWELL, GARY, 1989, “God, the Bible and circularity,” Infor- mal Logic, 11: 61-73. [BQ] COPI, IRVING M., 1953, Introduction to Logic, New York: Mac- millan. Subsequent editions 2nd to 7th: 1961, 1968, 1972, 1978, 1982, 1986; with CARL COHEN, 8th to 10th, 1990, 1994, 1998; with third author, KENNETH MCMAHON, 11th to 14th: 2002, 2005, 2009, 2011, Pearson Publications. [BT] COWAN, JOSEPH L., 1969, “The gambler's fallacy,” Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, 30: 238-51. [FR] CROUCH, MARGARET A., 1991, “Feminist philosophy and the genetic fallacy,” Hypatia, 6: 104-17. [FG] __, 1993, “A ‘limited’ defense of the genetic fallacy,” Metaphilosophy, 24: 227-40. [FG] CUMMINGS, LOUISE, 2000, “Mind and body, form and content: how not to do petitio principia analysis,” Philosophical Pa- pers, 29: 73-105. [BQ] __, 2000, “Petitio principii: The case for non-fallaciousness,” Informal Logic, 20: 1-18. [BQ] __, 2002, “Evaluating fallacies: Putnam’s model-theoretic lega- cy,” Philosophica, 69: 61-84. [GF-E] __, 2002, “Hilary Putnam's dialectical thinking: an application to fallacy theory,” Argumentation, 16: 197-229. [GF-E] __, 2002, “Reasoning under uncertainty: the role of two infor- mal fallacies in an emerging scientific inquiry,” Informal Logic, 22: 113-36. [AI] [FA] __, 2003, “Formal dialectic in fallacy inquiry: An unintelligible circumscription of argumentative rationality?” Argumenta- tion, 17: 161-83. [GF-D] __, 2004, “Analogical reasoning as a tool of epidemiological investigation,” Argumentation, 8: 427-44. [FA] __, 2004, “Argument as cognition: A Putnamian criticism of Dale Hample’s cognitive conception of argument,” Argu- mentation, 18: 331-48. [ GF-E] Hansen & Fioret © Hans V. Hansen & Cameron Fioret. Infomal Logic, Vol. 36, No. 4 (2016), pp. 432-472. 443 __, 2004, “Rejecting the urge to theorise in fallacy inquiry,” Ar- gumentation, 18: 61-94. [GFN] __, 2005, “Giving science a bad name: Politically and commer- cially motivated fallacies in BSE inquiry,” Argumentation, 19: 123-43. [AA] [FA] __, 2009, “Emerging infectious diseases: Coping with uncertain- ty,” Argumentation, 23: 171-88. [AI] [FA] __, 2010, Rethinking the BSE Crisis: A Study of Scientific Rea- soning under Uncertainty, Dordrecht: Springer. [AH-N] [AI] [AA] [BQ] [FA] [IE] __, 2011, “Considering risk assessment up close: The case of bovine spongiform encephalopathy,” Health, Risk & Socie- ty, 13: 255-275. [AI] [FA] __, 2012, “The contribution of informal logic to public health,” Perspectives in Public Health, 132: 66-7. [AI] [GF-N] __, 2012, “The public health scientist as informal logician,” In- ternational J. of Public Health, 57: 649-50. [AI] [FA] __, 2012, “Scaring the public: Fear appeal arguments in public health reasoning,” Informal Logic, 32: 25-50. [AB] __, 2013, “Circular reasoning in public health,” Cogency, 5: 35- 76. [BQ] __, 2013, “Public health reasoning: Much more than deduction,” Archives of Public Health, 71: 25. [AI] [AA] [BQ] [FA] __, 2014, “Analogical reasoning in public health,” J. of Argu- mentation in Context, 3: 169-97. [FA] __, 2014, “Circles and analogies in public health reasoning,” Inquiry, 29: 35-59. [BQ] [FA] __, 2014, “Coping with uncertainty in public health: The use of heuristics,” Public Health, 128: 391-4. [AI] [AA] [BQ] [FA] __, 2014, “Informal fallacies as cognitive heuristics in public health reasoning,” Informal Logic, 34: 1-37. [AI] [AA] __, 2014, “Public health reasoning: A logical view of trust,” Cogency, 6: 33-62. [AA] __, 2014, “The ‘trust’ heuristic: Arguments from authority in public health,” Health Communication, 29: 1043-56. [AA] __, 2015, Reasoning and Public Health: New Ways of Coping with Uncertainty, Dordrecht: Springer. [AI] [AA] [BQ] [FA] __, 2015, “The use of ‘no evidence’ statements in public health,” Informal Logic, 35: 32-65. [AI] A Searchable Bibliography of Fallacies © Hans V. Hansen & Cameron Fioret. Infomal Logic, Vol. 36, No. 4 (2016), pp. 432-472. 444 CUSICK, CAROLYN, and MARK PETER, 2015, “The last straw fal- lacy: Another causal fallacy and its harmful effects,” Argu- mentation, 29: 457-74. [CF] DAMER, T.E., 2009, Attacking faulty reasoning: a practical guide to fallacy-free arguments, 6th ed., Belmont, California: Wadsworth. [BT] DE WIJZE, STEPHEN, 2003, “Complexity, relevance and charac- ter: problems with teaching the ad hominem fallacy,” Educa- tional Philosophy and Theory, 35, 1:31-56. [AH-N] DICKIE, GEORGE, and W. KENT WILSON, 1995, “The intentional fallacy: defending Beardsley,” J. of Aesthetics and Art Criti- cism, 53: 233-50. [FI] DREHE, IOVAN, 2016, “Fallacy as vice and/or incontinence in decision making,” ECA 1 vol 2: 407-16. [GF-V] DODD, JULIAN, and SUZANNE STERN-GILLET, 1995, “The is/ought gap, the fact/value distinction and the naturalistic fallacy,” Dialogue, 34: 727-46. [FN] DOWDEN, BRADLEY, 2008, “Fallacies,” The Internet Encyclope- dia of Philosophy, . [GF- N] DUFOUR, MICHEL, 2013, “Commentary on: Maurice Finocchia- ro's ‘The fallacy of composition and meta-argumentation’,” OSSA 10. [CM] __, 2016, “What difference between fallacy and sophism,” OS- SA 11. [GF-N] [GF-C] VAN EEMEREN, FRANS H., 2001, “Fallacies,” In F. H. van Eeme- ren (ed.) Crucial Concepts in Argumentation Theory, Am- sterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 135-64. [GF-D] __, 2010, Strategic Maneuvering in Argumentative Discourse. Extending the Pragma-Dialectical Theory of Argumentation, Philadelphia: John Benjamins. (Chs. 7 and 9 especially.) [GF-D] __, 2012, “The pragma-dialectical theory under discussion,” Ar- gumentation, 26: 439-57. [GF-D] __, 2013, “Fallacies as derailments of argumentative discourse: Acceptance based on understanding and critical assessment,” J. of Pragmatics, 59: 141-152. [GF-D] VAN EEMEREN, FRANS H., and BART GARSSEN, 2010, “Linguis- tic criteria for judging composition and division fallacies,” in A. Capone (ed.), Perspectives on Language Use and Prag- matics. A Volume in Memory of Sorin Stati, Munich: Lincom Europa, 35-50. [CM] [DI] Hansen & Fioret © Hans V. Hansen & Cameron Fioret. Infomal Logic, Vol. 36, No. 4 (2016), pp. 432-472. 445 VAN EEMEREN, FRANS H., BART GARSSEN, and BERT MEUFFELS, 2002, “The unreasonableness of the ad baculum fallacy,” in ALTA 12: 343-50. [AB] __, 2015, “The disguised ad baculum fallacy empirically inves- tigated – strategic maneuvering with threats,” ISSA 8: 1396- 1407. [AB] VAN EEMEREN, FRANS H., BART GARSSEN, ERIK C.W. KRABBE, A. FRANCISCA SNOECK HENKEMANS, BART VERHEIJ, and JEAN H. WAGEMANS, 2014, “Classified Bibliography,” in (by the same authors) Handbook of Argumentation Theory, Dor- drecht: Springer. (See especially the bibliographies connected to chs. 1-3, 6.) [OB] __, 2005, “This can’t be true, that would be terrible: Ordinary arguers judgments about ad consequentiam fallacies,” in AL- TA 13: 669-75. [AC] __, 2007, “Convergent operations in empirical ad hominem re- search,” in ISSA 6: 367-73. [AH-N] __, 2008, “Reasonableness in confrontation. 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