specious argument

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specious argument

A politician makes a specious argument during a debate.

Definition

Noun: A specious argument is a line of reasoning that seems plausible, correct, or attractive on the surface but is actually misleading, flawed, or based on a false premise. Its apparent validity is deceptive.

Usage

A "specious argument" is used to describe a persuasive yet unsound case. It often relies on superficial logic, irrelevant points, or emotional appeal to create an illusion of truth. It is a formal term common in critical analysis, debate, philosophy, and rhetoric.

Examples
  • The politician's specious argument about economic growth relied on cherry-picked data from a single, exceptional year.
  • In the essay, the author carefully dismantled the specious argument that technology alone can solve climate change.
  • The advertisement's claim was based on a specious argument linking the product to vague notions of "natural wellness."
Advanced Usage
  • "To advance/present a specious argument": To put forward a deceptive argument.
    • The lawyer was criticized for advancing a specious argument that played on the jury's sympathies rather than the facts.
  • "The speciousness of the argument": Referring to the deceptive quality of the argument itself.
    • The debate judge pointed out the speciousness of the argument, noting its reliance on a false dichotomy.
Variants and Related Words
  • Specious (adj): Having a deceptive appearance of truth or merit.
    • The theory was appealing but ultimately specious.
  • Speciously (adv): In a misleadingly plausible manner.
    • The case was speciously presented.
Synonyms
  • Sophism: A clever but fallacious argument, often intended to deceive.
  • Fallacy: A mistaken belief or flawed reasoning.
  • Casuistry: Overly subtle or misleading reasoning, especially on moral issues.
  • Spurious argument: An argument that is not genuine or authentic.
Antonyms
  • Sound argument: An argument that is logically valid and based on true premises.
  • Cogent argument: A compelling and persuasive argument that is also logically sound.
  • Valid reasoning: Reasoning that correctly follows logical rules.
specious argument

A politician makes a specious argument during a debate.

Noun
  1. an argument that appears good at first view but is really fallacious