all-or-nothing fallacy
The "all-or-nothing fallacy" refers to the mistaken belief that if a situation or argument has potential drawbacks or exceptions, it must be entirely rejected or disregarded, without considering the possibility of finding a middle ground or addressing the nuances.
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Related Concepts (1)
Similar Concepts
- all-or-nothing mentality
- all-or-nothing mindset
- all-or-nothing thinking
- black-or-white fallacy
- circular reasoning fallacy
- either/or fallacy
- fallacy of the single cause
- false dichotomy fallacy
- gambler's fallacy
- gamblers' fallacy
- hasty generalization fallacy
- limited options fallacy
- logical fallacy
- slippery slope fallacy
- the hasty generalization fallacy