So here’s the thing: I have an obsession with logical fallacies.

It started several years ago when I was in university in my second semester English course. It continued to grow in my philosophy class. And it skyrocketed when I read Mastering Logical Fallacies by Michael Withey.

I poured that obsession into creating called The Fallacy Self-Audit, a workbook designed for you to check the validity of your thoughts, beliefs, and opinions.

[Click here if you want a FREE download of The Fallacy Self-Audit.]

In mid-2019, I also took it upon myself to create Fallacy Fridays on Twitter, weekly lessons on logical fallacies. Because look…all of us have made bad arguments. Myself included. And I think it is beneficial for us to learn those flaws in our argumentation (aka logical fallacies) so we know how we shouldn’t be arguing.

I don’t think it has to be a jargon-filled learning experience that requires a philosophy degree to understand it. That is why I aim to make the lessons generally easy to understand.

I also know that some people learn better by writing or typing. So I created #FallacyFridays: The Workbook. It was designed to follow alongside Fallacy Fridays lessons in order for you to better understand logical fallacies.

You ready? Here’s the full-list of #FallacyFridays Lessons. Happy learning! 🤓

List of #FallacyFridays Lessons:

1 – 27. Visit Twitter for the megathread containing the lessons in this range

28. Affirming the Consequent

29. Denying the Antecedent

30. Appeal to Emotion

31. Non-Sequitur

32. Four Terms

33. Appeal to the Stone

34. Appeal to Ignorance