video thumbnail 6:16
Can you outsmart the college admissions fallacy? - Elizabeth Cox

2022-06-07

[public] 603K views, 29.9K likes, dislikes audio only

channel thumbTED-Ed

Explore the circular reasoning fallacy, which occurs when the end of an argument comes back to the start without having proven itself.

--

It’s 1990. A prospective student has filed a complaint about Virginia Military institute’s admissions policy that excludes women. The state argues that VMI’s single sex education is an “important governmental objective” and that the exclusion of women from VMI is essential to that objective. Can you spot the problem with this argument? Elizabeth Cox explores the circular reasoning fallacy.

Lesson by Elizabeth Cox, directed by TOGETHER.

Support Our Non-Profit Mission

----------------------------------------------

Support us on Patreon: http://bit.ly/TEDEdPatreon

Check out our merch: http://bit.ly/TEDEDShop

----------------------------------------------

Connect With Us

----------------------------------------------

Sign up for our newsletter: http://bit.ly/TEDEdNewsletter

Follow us on Facebook: http://bit.ly/TEDEdFacebook

Find us on Twitter: http://bit.ly/TEDEdTwitter

Peep us on Instagram: http://bit.ly/TEDEdInstagram

----------------------------------------------

Keep Learning

----------------------------------------------

View full lesson: https://ed.ted.com/lessons/can-you-outsmart-the-college-admissions-fallacy-elizabeth-cox

Dig deeper with additional resources: https://ed.ted.com/lessons/can-you-outsmart-the-college-admissions-fallacy-elizabeth-cox#digdeeper

Animator's website: https://wearetogether.ca

----------------------------------------------

Thank you so much to our patrons for your support! Without you this video would not be possible! Hiroshi Uchiyama, Mark Morris, Misaki Sato, EdoKun, SookKwan Loong, Bev Millar, Lex Azevedo, Michael Aquilina, Jason A Saslow, Dawn Jordan, Prasanth Mathialagan, Samuel Doerle, David Rosario, Dominik Kugelmann - they-them, Siamak H, Ryohky Araya, Mayank Kaul, Christophe Dessalles, Heather Slater, Sandra Tersluisen, Zhexi Shan, Bárbara Nazaré, Andrea Feliz, Victor E Karhel, Sydney Evans, Latora Slydell, Noel Situ, emily lam, Sid, Kent Logan, Thomas Mee, Maryann H McCrory, Mona Vakil, Victoria Dewey, Alex Lorang, Declan O'Donoghue, Blas Borde, John Hellmann, Poompak Meephian, Chuck Wofford, Daniel Erickson, frank goto, Jayson Hauschild, J D Wallace, Marq Short, Chen Jun Xiang, Adam Pagan, Behzad Farhanieh, Anders Sørheim and Wes Winn.


Can you outsmart the fallacy that started a witch hunt? - Elizabeth Cox by TED-Ed
/youtube/video/L9rkQJ91VOE
Can you outsmart the fallacy that started a witch hunt? - Elizabeth Cox 990,447 views
/youtube/video/L9rkQJ91VOE
How to use rhetoric to get what you want - Camille A. Langston 2,869,966 views
/youtube/video/3klMM9BkW5o
TED-Ed TED-Ed’s mission is to create lessons worth sharing. Feed and expand your curiosity with our award-winning animated shorts - published on YouTube and available with supplemental learning materials on ed.ted.com. Want to suggest an idea for a TED-Ed animation, nominate an educator or animator? Visit our website at: http://ed.ted.com/get_involved. Consider backing us on Patreon. By doing so, you directly support our nonprofit mission to create free, high-quality educational content: https://www.patreon.com/teded For more information on using TED-Ed content for commercial purposes (e.g. employee learning, in a film, or in an online course), please submit a Media Request using this link: https://media-requests.ted.com/
/youtube/channel/UCsooa4yRKGN_zEE8iknghZA