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Meta-Fallacies

Errors in reasoning that occur not within an argument itself, but in the process of identifying, analyzing, or dismissing other fallacies. They are mistakes made one level up, in the "meta" layer of argumentation. The classic example is the Fallacy Fallacy (dismissing a claim as false solely because it was argued for with a fallacy). Meta-fallacies are the pitfalls of being a fallacy detective—getting so focused on catching logical errors that you commit new ones by misapplying labels, being overly pedantic, or using fallacy calls to avoid engaging with the substance of an argument.
Meta-Fallacies Example: Person A makes a valid point about economic inequality but uses a slightly emotional analogy. Person B triumphantly declares, "Aha! Appeal to emotion! Your entire point is invalid!" Person B has committed the Fallacy Fallacy, a primary Meta-Fallacy. They incorrectly believe identifying a flaw in the argument's delivery automatically negates its factual content.
by Dumu The Void February 4, 2026
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Semi-fallacies

Reasoning errors that are almost but not quite full fallacies—arguments that have the appearance of fallaciousness without fully meeting the criteria. Semi-fallacies live in the borderlands between valid and invalid reasoning. An argument might be technically fallacious but practically reasonable; it might contain a fallacy but still point toward truth. Semi-fallacies are the gray areas of logic, where rigid categorization fails. Recognizing them requires judgment, not just memorization of fallacy names. They're the reason fallacy-spotting in online debates is often itself fallacious—because real arguments rarely fit cleanly into textbook categories.
Semi-fallacies Example: "His argument had the shape of a slippery slope, but the slope was short and the steps well-supported. Was it a fallacy or just a prediction? Semi-fallacy—not quite one, not quite not. She couldn't simply cry 'fallacy' and dismiss it; she had to engage the substance. The gray area demanded thought, not labels."
by Abzugal March 7, 2026
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Quasi-fallacies

Reasoning patterns that resemble fallacies but operate differently—arguments that look fallacious from outside but make sense within their context. Quasi-fallacies are the shape-shifters of logic: they wear the clothes of fallacy but serve legitimate functions. A circular argument in a formal debate is fallacious; the same circle in a therapeutic context might be healing. An ad hominem in a scientific paper is wrong; the same attack in a political context might be relevant. Quasi-fallacies remind us that fallaciousness is context-dependent, that the same form can serve different functions in different settings.
Quasi-fallacies Example: "He attacked the speaker's character in a political debate. Textbook ad hominem—but the speaker's character was directly relevant to the issue (trust on policy). Quasi-fallacy: it looked like a fallacy, functioned like a fallacy in some contexts, but here it was relevant. She couldn't dismiss it with a label; she had to address the relevance."
by Abzugal March 7, 2026
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Proto-fallacies

Early-stage reasoning errors that haven't yet developed into full fallacies—the seeds of fallacious thinking before they bloom. Proto-fallacies are what you see in arguments that are starting to go wrong but haven't yet crossed the line. A vague generalization that could become a hasty generalization; an emotional appeal that could become a full appeal to emotion. Recognizing proto-fallacies allows intervention before the error solidifies—a chance to steer reasoning back toward soundness. They're the prevention side of fallacy theory.
Proto-fallacies Example: "His argument was starting to generalize from one case—not enough to be a hasty generalization yet, but heading that way. Proto-fallacy: the seed was there. She pointed it out early: 'You're basing a lot on one example.' He had chance to correct before the fallacy bloomed. The intervention worked; the argument improved."
by Abzugal March 7, 2026
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Neo-fallacies

New forms of fallacious reasoning that have emerged in the digital age—errors that didn't exist or weren't recognized before the internet. Neo-fallacies include sealioning (relentless bad-faith questioning), concern trolling (expressing fake concern to undermine), and the many forms of online manipulation documented earlier in this dictionary. They're fallacies for the networked age, adapted to the peculiar conditions of digital discourse. Recognizing neo-fallacies requires updating logical theory to match contemporary practice.
Neo-fallacies Example: "He wasn't arguing; he was sealioning—endless 'just asking questions' that never engaged, never satisfied, never ended. Neo-fallacy: a new form of bad-faith interaction enabled by digital platforms. She couldn't fight it with traditional fallacy tools; she had to recognize the new form and respond appropriately—by not engaging at all."
by Abzugal March 7, 2026
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Counter-fallacies

The strategic deployment of fallacy accusations as a rhetorical weapon—using the language of logic not to identify errors but to dismiss opponents. Counter-fallacies are what happen when fallacy-spotting itself becomes fallacious. You cry "ad hominem" whenever someone criticizes you; you scream "straw man" whenever someone summarizes your position; you declare "slippery slope" whenever someone predicts consequences. The counter-fallacy turns logic into a cudgel, fallacy-naming into a silencing tactic. It's meta-fallacy: using the concept of fallacy to commit fallacies.
Counter-fallacies Example: "Every response she made was met with a fallacy label. 'Ad hominem!' (she'd mentioned his bias). 'Straw man!' (she'd summarized his argument). 'Slippery slope!' (she'd predicted a consequence). Counter-fallacy: using fallacy accusations to avoid engagement. He wasn't doing logic; he was doing rhetoric, using logic's language to silence discussion."
by Abzugal March 7, 2026
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The frustrating reality that identifying a logical fallacy in someone's argument does not automatically prove their conclusion wrong, nor does it validate your own. Fallacies are flaws in reasoning, not truth detectors. The "hard problem" is the temptation to use fallacy labels (e.g., "that's just an ad hominem!") as a rhetorical knockout punch, ending the discussion while providing zero substantive counter-argument. This reduces critical thinking to a game of fallacy bingo, where the goal is to spot errors rather than collaboratively pursue truth. A conclusion reached via fallacious reasoning can still be accidentally true, and a logically pristine argument can lead to a false conclusion if its premises are wrong.
Example: Person A: "We should fix the bridge. The engineer who designed it is a known liar!" Person B: "Ad hominem fallacy! Invalid argument, the bridge is fine." B has correctly spotted a fallacy (attacking the person, not the bridge's condition), but has done nothing to assess the actual safety of the bridge. The hard problem: Winning the logical battle doesn't win the factual war. The bridge might still be crumbling, but the conversation is now dead, replaced by a smug scorecard of who used logic correctly. Hard Problem of Logical Fallacies.
by Dumuabzu January 25, 2026
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