cannabineer
Ursus marijanus
Heisenberg, I yield. I'm sure that the moment you tell me, I'll slap my forehead. cn
Mitsubishi what you expect for $300?i happen to enjoy my mitsu!! lol
boils down to people will believe anything the majority does. ie mindless followers
1 up for the fries! now I'm hungry!Argumentum ad populum
EDIT: Didn't see all the other posts - this was for the Paris Hilton, Mc Donalds example...
Special pleading is correct, which puts you in second place.Special pleading of course.
also recent studies prove that we use far, far more of our brains than the fabled 10%. you can eat your demerrit with hot sauce.Please do not attempt to argue the details of arbitrary examples in this thread.
Yes, that would be the factual error I refereed to in the very next line, but lets clear up the myth since you singled it out.also recent studies prove that we use far, far more of our brains than the fabled 10%. you can eat your demerrit with hot sauce.
blah blah blah. whatever the case, i have friggin ESP. put that on your toast.Yes, that would be the factual error I refereed to in the very next line, but lets clear up the myth since you singled it out.
The myth implies that 90% of the human brain is dormant and may harbor vast untapped potential. If the 10% we do use governs all our internal functions, subconscious processes, and conscious thought then the inactive 90% must be capable of wondrous accomplishments. Perhaps this is where the potential for extra sensory perception and telekinetic energy is held. Maybe this is the part of the brain being used when mediums enter a trance and talk to the dead, or when dowsers locate water with a pair of sticks.
The problem is that neuroscience has never held the idea that we only use 10% of our brain capacity. It is so unsupported that no one can even explain how this misconception arose. It has been shown that no part of the brain can be damaged through trauma or disease without having some consequences, often rather severe. Through low tech research such as autopsy to detailed imaging scans like MRI, it has been observed that no part of the brain is without function, although there are redundancies. If this myth were true, a person could lose 90% of their brain and still function normally. Alzheimer’s patients lose significant brain function with just a 20% loss of brain cells, and rarely live to see 50%.
It also doesn't make sense that a species would evolve such a resource intensive organ without specific need. The brain demands constant oxygen and energy. It seems odd that evolution would select to preserve something with 10% efficiency.
Now there is the question, how much of our brain do we use at any one time? This is a question the mythbusters answered. They found that during complicated tasks we can use as much as 40% of our brain at once. Their methods were a bit too sloppy to assign precision, but they clearly demonstrated we use more than 10%.
There is no theoretical or evidential reason to think any part of our brain is dormant.
http://www.snopes.com/science/stats/10percent.asp
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=do-we-really-use-only-10
Correct! That answer with examples puts you in the lead.begging the question.
"The universe has a beginning. Every thing that has a beginning has a cause. Therefore, the universe has a cause called God."
"We know God exists because we can see the perfect order of His Creation, an order which demonstrates supernatural intelligence in its design.'
These are my examples. The first one begs the questions that the universe has a beginning and that everything has a cause.
The second one has the conclusion, that god exists, based on the premise of intelligent design. The existence of intelligent design assumes a designer so the conclusion is assumed in the premise.
The judges say you are very close, however this is a specific form of argument to moderation which qualifies it as a fallacy. Argument to moderation is not always invalid. I must give your opponents a chance to answer, even though I am impressed with your example.Argument to moderation.
This is a reflexive avoidance of the extremes of a continuum, even if one of those extremes is right.
An amusing example of this is Urinal Theory, wherein very few men, when faced with a row of unoccupied urinals, will select one at the end.
cn