cherry picking in legal arguments
Cherry picking in legal arguments refers to the selective use or presentation of evidence, facts, or legal precedent to support one's case, while disregarding or omitting contradictory or unfavorable information.
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Related Concepts (1)
Similar Concepts
- analyzing and critiquing arguments
- applying critical thinking to arguments
- cherry picking (confirmation bias)
- cherry-picking data
- cherry-picking evidence
- cherry-picking in sports statistics
- decision making in legal settings
- flawed arguments
- laws and legal precedents
- legal appeals
- legal arguments
- misleading arguments
- selective evidence
- selective quoting
- strawman arguments