Not exact matches
Ben Bernanke's
False Analogy Global Research On the March 15 CBS show «60 Minutes», Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke used a false analogy already popularized by President Obama in his quasi-State of the Union Sp
False Analogy Global Research On the March 15 CBS show «60 Minutes», Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke used a false analogy already popularized by President Obama in his quasi-State of the Union
Analogy Global Research On the March 15 CBS show «60 Minutes», Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke used a
false analogy already popularized by President Obama in his quasi-State of the Union Sp
false analogy already popularized by President Obama in his quasi-State of the Union
analogy already popularized by President Obama
in his quasi-State of the Union Speech.
On the March 15 CBS show «60 Minutes», Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke used a
false analogy already popularized by President Obama
in his quasi-State of the Union Speech.
The conclusion from this examination of the texts is that the
analogy between molecules and electrons on the one hand and God and actual occasions on the other is without foundation and very misleading, since it lulls the unwary reader into feeling that since Whitehead at least implicitly acknowledges overlapping regional standpoints
in the first instance (which we have seen to be
false) then to say that God is omnipresent, meaning that the standpoint of God includes the regions which constitute the standpoints of all actual occasions, is merely an extension of a general principle which Whitehead at least implicitly endorses.
From that
analogy you argue that a
false belief of a small mind may be
in a large mind without the large minds accepting the
false belief.
But the idea — as proposed by James Forsyth
in the Spectator — that Ed Miliband might now be performing a Howard function for Labour, staying on for long enough that the most electable successor wins out, is a
false analogy.
In the world of the very small, where particle and wave aspects of reality are equally significant, things do not behave in any way that we can understand from our experience of the everyday world... all pictures are false, and there is no physical analogy we can make to understand what goes on inside atom
In the world of the very small, where particle and wave aspects of reality are equally significant, things do not behave
in any way that we can understand from our experience of the everyday world... all pictures are false, and there is no physical analogy we can make to understand what goes on inside atom
in any way that we can understand from our experience of the everyday world... all pictures are
false, and there is no physical
analogy we can make to understand what goes on inside atoms.
But suggesting that you throw out the animals based on a bizarre
analogy is not only unethical, it was predicated on a factually incorrect and incoherent premise: the
false belief
in pet overpopulation
in San Francisco.
Yet
in the sense that the word primal has been associated with a lack of sophistication, this
analogy would be
false.
This assertion could be interpreted
in different ways, but on any interpretation the
analogy appears as
false.
While there's a plausible charge of card - stacking
in Marcott and certainly
false (or exaggerated)
analogy, Istvan (who called Marcott's paper propaganda) has demonstrated nearly every technique of propaganda
in his critiques.
She then begins a litany of standard
false analogies and arguments by assertion, assuming what is
in fact centrally
in question.
In attempt to justify your repeated presenttion of the appeal to authority falacy you persistently prsent a
false analogy.
The
analogy overlooks a
false and dangerous inference — that because small children engage
in «parallel play» before developing social skills, therefore «parallel parenting» must be a developmental step toward a socialized cooperation for full - grown hostile adults whose relationship interaction has
in fact «developed»
in the opposite direction, from love and marriage to hostility and conflict.