Helpful Professor
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10 False Dichotomy Examples (2025)
January 3, 2024 - In Exercising: A lot of people on social media that have devoted their life to exercising espouse a common mantra: either max-out or go home. No middle road in this mindset. Not pushing yourself to the point of pain is the same as sitting on ...
Word Spinner
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Word Spinner - Examples of Logical Fallacies in the Media: A 2025 Guide
November 14, 2025 - A false cause and effect fallacy happens when a media report assumes that because two events happen together, one must be the cause of the other. This mistake, also known as confusing correlation with causation, is one of the most widespread examples of logical fallacies in the media, particularly in reporting on complex topics like health, economics, or social trends where many factors are at play.
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Number Analytics
numberanalytics.com › blog › false-dichotomy-rhetoric-philosophy
False Dichotomy: A Rhetorical Trap
This dichotomy overlooks the possibility of affordable luxury or value-for-money options. In media: "You're either a supporter of the new policy or a defender of the status quo." This binary classification ignores the potential for mixed or nuanced views on the policy.
Noomii
noomii.com › articles › 10742-beware-of-false-dichotomy
Beware of False Dichotomy by Andrew Bazakis | Noomii
Sometimes false dichotomies (also called false dilemmas) are either warned against or implied on more benign matters not involving any bullying at all. For example, on social media I have seen the following meme:
Answers In Reason
answers-in-reason.com › 🏠 › philosophy › epistemology › logic › fallacies
“False Dichotomy!” – The Dilemma of Arrogance and Willful Ignorance » Answers In Reason
April 18, 2023 - It’s not uncommon on Social Media to be met with some strange takes on subjects that are pretty well grounded, like the False Dichotomy. Folks can make mistakes, but instead of realising that and learning from that they often double down. Today we are going to be discussing the False Dichotomy. What it is, how it ought to be used, and an example of someone dancing around the fact that they don’t know what they are talking about.
Hot Pepper
hotpepper.ca › blog › 2019 › 01 › 02 › logical-fallacies-false-dichotomy
Logical fallacies: false dichotomy
November 26, 2019 - While fallacies are typically from the debating sphere and may seem out of place on a blog dedicated to writing, they do appear in writing as well. And not just in social media and blog comments either. They can appear in website and marketing copy, political speeches, opinion pieces, and so on. Today’s fallacy is false dichotomy.
Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org › wiki › False_dilemma
False dilemma - Wikipedia
4 weeks ago - The problematic content in the case of the false dilemma has the form of a disjunctive claim: it asserts that one among a number of alternatives must be true. This disjunction is problematic because it oversimplifies the choice by excluding viable alternatives. Sometimes a distinction is made between a false dilemma and a false dichotomy.
K. Epperson
kepperson.com
How to Think Better: Understanding False Dichotomy – K. Epperson
Do you remember the dress controversy a few years ago on social media? You know, the one where no one could agree if the dress was blue/black or white/gold?
Sophos
swgfl.org.uk › topics › social-media › misinformation-on-social-media-guidance-impact-and-support
Misinformation on Social Media – Guidance, Impact and Support | SWGfL
Recently, we have seen an increase of misinformation across social platforms which were created to spread false or misleading viral videos about the war in Ukaraine. To combat this particular spread of misinformed news, reporters such as Victoria Derbyshire have been utilising platforms such as TikTok, to debunk wrongful information and to highlight what has really been happening, to her followers; some of which are in younger age groups. The above are just a few examples of misinformation shared on social media.
MasterClass
masterclass.com › articles › logical-fallacies
12 Logical Fallacies: How to Identify Logical Fallacies - 2026 - MasterClass
For example, suppose someone says, “Social media increases social division because it causes polarization.” Here, the arguer restates the conclusion rather than supports it with new information. 5. Equivocation fallacy: In an equivocation fallacy, an arguer uses a deliberately ambiguous term.
Pwshblueprints
pwshblueprints.com › life › 2019 › 08 › 27 › rejecting-the-false-dichotomy-surrounding-social-media
Rejecting the False Dichotomy Surrounding Social Media – The Plano West BluePrints
Recent studies offer a clear verdict on social media’s effects on teenage mental health: According to the Child Mind Institute, “…teenage and young adult users who spend the most time on Instagram, Facebook and other platforms were shown to have a substantially higher (from 13 to 66 percent) rate of reported depression than those who spent the least time.” Statistics like these paint an overwhelmingly bleak picture of the self-documenting generation raised on social media, but the issue is a bit more nuanced.
QuillBot
quillbot.com › home › what is a false dichotomy? | definition & examples
What Is a False Dichotomy? | Definition & Examples
November 25, 2025 - Media professionals use this technique, knowing they can attract more viewers and readers with extreme statements than they would by using more reasonable language. False dichotomy example in mediaA headline from a technology news magazine reads, “Will AI be our savior or the end of humanity?”