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| Paragraph 1 |
So much, then, for apparent refutations. |
| Paragraph 2 |
A rule specially appropriate for showing up a fallacy is the sophistic
rule, that one should draw the answerer on to the kind of statements
against which one is well supplied with arguments: |
| Paragraph 3 |
Moreover, argue from men's wishes and their professed opinions. |
| Paragraph 4 |
The widest range of common-place argument for leading men into paradoxical
statement is that which depends on the standards of Nature and of
the Law: |
| Paragraph 5 |
Some questions are such that in both forms the answer is paradoxical; |