by Laurie Bluedorn | Aug 5, 2016 | Logic
Have you ever heard the word “fallacy?” A fallacy is the use of wrong moves in the construction of an argument — when you’re trying to convince someone of something. These wrong moves render your argument unsound. There are dozens of types of...
by Laurie Bluedorn | Aug 5, 2016 | Logic, New Christian Logic Product, Reviews
Post may contain affiliate links to materials I recommend. Read my full disclosure statement. Looking for reviewers for the new edition of The Fallacy Detective: Thirty-Eight Lessons on How to Recognize Bad Reasoning. If you are a book reviewer, message me if...
by Laurie Bluedorn | May 18, 2016 | Classical Education, Logic
Post may contain affiliate links to materials I recommend. Read my full disclosure statement. Should Students be Taught to Argue Rationally? by Annie Holmquist “…Given the level of fallacious and emotional reasoning that takes place in discussions about...
by Laurie Bluedorn | May 9, 2016 | Logic, Reviews
Post may contain affiliate links to materials I recommend. Read my full disclosure statement. by Annie Holmquist After taking a hiatus from watching news programs for a while, a friend of mine recently turned on MSNBC. Following this experience, he said something...
by Laurie Bluedorn | Mar 24, 2016 | Classical Education, Logic
Post may contain affiliate links to materials I recommend. Read my full disclosure statement. Should Students be Taught to Spot Logical Fallacies? It would certainly come in handy during the political season… by Annie Holmquist As the particularly contentious...
by Laurie Bluedorn | Jan 4, 2015 | Classical Education, Logic, Reviews
Post may contain affiliate links to materials I recommend. Read my full disclosure statement. Logic can be a difficult subject to teach, yet The Thinking Toolbox: Thirty-five Lessons That Will Build Your Reasoning Skills, by Nathaniel Bluedorn and Hans Bluedorn, is a...