Extended Analogy


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    This page needs some cleaning up to be presentable.

    Not so much cleanup as bulking-up -- there's almost nothing on this page; compared to what we have on other logical fallacies, it's skimpy.

    The Extended Analogy fallacy is committed when, while arguing a general rule, a comparison is made between a single aspect of two situations, and a reply treats it as a claim the two are directly analogous to each other. For example:

    "I do not support the use of cracks to bypass copy protection, regardless of my opposition to copy protection. I believe it is always wrong to oppose the law by breaking it."
    "Such a position is odious: it implies that you would not have supported Martin Luther King."
    "Are you saying that software piracy is as important as the struggle for Black liberation? How dare you!"

    (Also an example of Appeal to Worse Problems)

    This page needs a better description. You can help this wiki by expanding or clarifying the information given.

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