Loaded Questions

#1
Many questions, also known as complex question, presupposition, loaded question, "trick question", is an informal fallacy or logical fallacy.

It is committed when someone asks a question that presupposes something that has not been proven or accepted by all the people involved.

This fallacy is often used rhetorically, so that the question limits direct replies to those that serve the questioner's agenda.

An example of this is the question "you don't care much for football, do you?" Weather the respondent answers yes or no, he is answering a question to which the questioner, more than likely, already knows the answer to. The questioner probably already knows the person in question doesn't like football, and the person answering is therefore answering a question to which the questioner already knows the answer to, so why ask? This is what's called a loaded question. When the questioners agenda and meaning gets twisted within the question, the questioner already knows the subject doesn't follow football, so the real question in question is 'you don't care much ... do you?' a question within a question, to serve the questioners agenda, a 'trick question'.

Thus, these facts are presupposed by the question, and in this case an entrapment, because it narrows the respondent to a single answer, and the fallacy of many questions has been committed.

The fallacy relies upon context for its effect: the fact that a question presupposes something does not in itself make the question fallacious.

Only when some of these presuppositions are not necessarily agreed to by the person who is asked the question does the argument containing them become fallacious.

A related fallacy is begging the question, in which a premise is included that is likely to be at least as unacceptable to an opponent as the proposed conclusion.

It's difficult to pick up on these subtle uses of grammar unless you are familiar with the term, types, expression, and uses of loaded questions. All i can say is, know your grammar, then you won't get caught out.
 

vg4030

Well-Known Member
#2
Did you use the word fallacy like 50 times to sound smarter or do you actually talk like that or did you just copy this from somewhere?
This whole things reads like a college text book that is unnecessarily 'wordy'.

I dont get what you are trying to ask? basically you're saying that people ask rhetorical questions where they already know or assume the answer.. is that it?
 
#4
Did you use the word fallacy like 50 times to sound smarter or do you actually talk like that or did you just copy this from somewhere?
This whole things reads like a college text book that is unnecessarily 'wordy'.

I dont get what you are trying to ask? basically you're saying that people ask rhetorical questions where they already know or assume the answer.. is that it?
man that's just yeshua falling back in his "tryin' to look inteligent whereas it's obvious and everybody knows and already told me that i'm a dumb ass motherfucka" days
 
#5
yes i copied from wiki, and i edited it too! ... i'm just trying to raise awareness on the grammatical subject and would like to discuss it too, is that too much to ask. what i'm saying is rhetorical questions should be thwarted through awareness, as they are decieving, everyone should know this
 

Da_Funk

Well-Known Member
#8
Most gulls, particularly Larus species, are ground nesting carnivores, which will take live food or scavenge opportunistically. The live food often includes crabs and small fish. Apart from the kittiwakes, gulls are typically coastal or inland species, rarely venturing far out to sea and into surrounding deciduous forests. The large species take up to four years to attain full adult plumage, but two years is typical for small gulls. Large White-Headed Gulls are typically long-lived birds, with a maximum age of 49 years recorded for the Herring Gull.

Gulls nest in large, densely packed, and noisy colonies. They lay two to three speckled eggs in nests composed of vegetation. The young are precocial, being born with dark mottled down, and mobile from birth.

Gulls—the larger species in particular—are resourceful, inquisitive and highly intelligent birds, demonstrating complex methods of communication and a highly developed social structure; for example, many gull colonies display mobbing behaviour, attacking and harassing would-be predators and other intruders. In addition, certain species (e.g. the Herring Gull) have exhibited tool use behaviour. Many species of gull have learned to coexist successfully with humans and have thrived in human habitats. Others rely on kleptoparasitism to get their food. The urban gull population in the United Kingdom has been growing quickly, probably due to laws such as the Clean Air Act 1956 which prohibited the burning of garbage by local landfill owners, thus increasing the availability of food for the gulls.
 

Cooper

Well-Known Member
#12
Any conformal map on a portion of Euclidean space of dimension greater than 2 can be composed from three types of transformation: a homothetic transformation, an isometry, and a special conformal transformation. (A "special conformal transformation" is the composition of a reflection and an inversion in a sphere.) Thus, the group of conformal transformations in spaces of dimension greater than 2 are much more restricted than the planar case, where the Riemann mapping theorem provides a large group of conformal transformations.
 

vg4030

Well-Known Member
#13
fuck you, you're french does not compare to my english grammar expertise ease
YOUR English grammar failed here in spectacular fashion.

Word of free advice, when criticizing someone’s grammar, don’t make mistakes yourself.

Thanks for raising our awareness of loaded questions, maybe we should have a telethon or something?
 
#14
YOUR English grammar failed here in spectacular fashion.

Word of free advice, when criticizing someone’s grammar, don’t make mistakes yourself.

Thanks for raising our awareness of loaded questions, maybe we should have a telethon or something?

Do you have a Facebook? I need a positive Indian role model. Before this, it was just simply Gandhi and Kerpal. It was time for a change.
 

Duke

Well-Known Member
Staff member
#15
That's really impressive. I've never seen a clip of a car doing a complete lap around the N'ring.

I wonder how a Kia would fair.
Search youtube for "nurburgring lap onboard" or something and a whole new world of killing time opens up for ya.

Most are good since the drivers are really gunning it (ZR-1, GT-R, Porsches (Rohrl)), but the best is that Le Mans Porsche with Stefan Bellof (rip) at the wheel. Still the fastest total time of the 'Ring. 6'11. Crazy.

Ok its actually a practice lap by Derek Bell @ 6:41 but still dirty dirty quick
 

Sebastian

Well-Known Member
#18
Yoshii, please stop it! Dont even start thinking about these kind of things. You dont even understand the basic things in life. You dont realise that you are a tool. You dont realise that no one here takes you seriously. Stop it for christs sake.
 

vg4030

Well-Known Member
#19
Do you have a Facebook? I need a positive Indian role model. Before this, it was just simply Gandhi and Kerpal. It was time for a change.
LMAO! Yeah I do lol

Im not a bit fan of Gandhi myself, I can never forgive what he did to Baghat Singh.. and Kerpal claimed to be Pakistani.. so by default he is a terrorist
 

Jokerman

Well-Known Member
#20
Most gulls, particularly Larus species, are ground nesting carnivores, which will take live food or scavenge opportunistically. The live food often includes crabs and small fish. Apart from the kittiwakes, gulls are typically coastal or inland species, rarely venturing far out to sea and into surrounding deciduous forests. The large species take up to four years to attain full adult plumage, but two years is typical for small gulls. Large White-Headed Gulls are typically long-lived birds, with a maximum age of 49 years recorded for the Herring Gull.

Gulls nest in large, densely packed, and noisy colonies. They lay two to three speckled eggs in nests composed of vegetation. The young are precocial, being born with dark mottled down, and mobile from birth.

Gulls—the larger species in particular—are resourceful, inquisitive and highly intelligent birds, demonstrating complex methods of communication and a highly developed social structure; for example, many gull colonies display mobbing behaviour, attacking and harassing would-be predators and other intruders. In addition, certain species (e.g. the Herring Gull) have exhibited tool use behaviour. Many species of gull have learned to coexist successfully with humans and have thrived in human habitats. Others rely on kleptoparasitism to get their food. The urban gull population in the United Kingdom has been growing quickly, probably due to laws such as the Clean Air Act 1956 which prohibited the burning of garbage by local landfill owners, thus increasing the availability of food for the gulls.
Everyone already knows this. It's posted like every month here.
 

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