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Figaro rips the innards out of things people say and reveals the rhetorical tricks and pratfalls. For terms and definitions, click here.
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Cheat and Manipulate


Distractions and other intentional fouls.

 You have a Constitutional right to carry concealed rhetorical weapons, but please use them responsibly.  Besides, the best defense is knowing what’s offensive.


circumlocution (cir-cum-lo-CUE-tion)
The rhetorical end run.

equivocation
(e-quiv-o-KAY-shon)
The language mask.

eristic (er-ISS-tick)
A competitive argument for the sake of argument.

false analogy
The fallacy of strange bedfellows.

heterogenium (het-er-oh-GEE-nee-um)
The figure of distraction.

innuendo
The technique of planting negative ideas in the audience’s head.

leptologia (lep-to-LO-ia)
Quibbling.
Also see this.

metalepsis (met-ah-LEP-sis)
The figure of remote cause.

metastasis (met-AH-stah-sis)
Skipping over an awkward matter.

non sequitur (non SEH-quit-tor)
The figure of irrelevance.

pysma (PISS-mah)
The figure of multiple questions.

quibbling
Using careful language to obfuscate. The rhetorical term is leptologia.

red herring
The fallacy of distraction.

reductio ad absurdum
Taking an opponent’s argument to its illogical conclusion.

skotison (SKO-tih-son)
The figure of ultimate darkness.

slippery slope fallacy
The fallacy of dire consequences. It assumes that one choice will necessarily lead to a cascading series of bad choices.

straw man fallacy
Instead of dealing with the actual issue, attack a weaker version of the argument.  (Also see this.)

tautology (taw-TAH-lo-gee)
The redundant figure.