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Begging the Question/ Caitlyn Nunn, Chloe Christensen, Reece Taylor, and Jade Ballard Definition

● A (normally) comical in which a proposition is backed by a or that are backed by the same proposition. Thus creating a cycle where no new or useful is shared. Universal Example

● “Pvt. Joe Bowers: What are these electrolytes? Do you even know?

Secretary of State: They're... what they use to make Brawndo!

Pvt. Joe Bowers: But why do they use them to make Brawndo?

Secretary of Defense: [raises hand after a pause] Because Brawndo's got electrolytes” (Example from logically fallicious.com from the movie Idiocracy). Circular Reasoning in The Crucible

Quote: One committing the fallacy: Elizabeth Hale: But, woman, you do believe there are witches in- : Elizabeth that Elizabeth: If you think that I am one, there are no witches in Salem because then I say there are none. she knows that she is not a witch. She doesn’t think that she’s a witch (p. 200, act 2, lines 65-68) because she doesn’t believe that there are witches in Salem. And so on. More examples from The Crucible

Quote: One committing the fallacy: Martha Martha Corey: I am innocent to a witch. I know not what a witch is. Explanation: This conversation Hawthorne: How do you know, then, between Martha and Hathorne is an that you are not a witch? example of . In Martha Corey: If I were, I would know it. Martha’s answer to Judge Hathorne, she uses false . She initially says (p. 207, act 3, lines 5-9) that she does not know what a witch is, but later she tells Hathorne that she would know if she was a witch.