Hominem: The Ten Commandments of Logic
 Thou shalt not attack the person's character, but the argument. (Ad
 hominem)
 1.
 Thou shalt not misrepresent or exaggerate a person's argument in
 order to make it easier to attack. (Straw man fallacy)
 2.
 Thou shalt not use small numbers to represent the all. (Hasty
 generalisation)
 3.
 Thou shalt not argue thy position by assuming one of its premises is
 true. (Begging the question)
 4.
 Thou shalt not claim that because something occured before, it must
 be the cause. (Post hoc/False cause)
 5.
 Thou shalt not reduce the argument down to two possibilities. (False
 dichotomy)
 6.
 Thou shalt not argue that because of our ignorance, a claim must be
 true or false. (Ad ignorantum)
 7.
 Thou shalt not lay the burden of proof onto him that is questioning
 the claim. (Burden of proof reversal)
 8.
 Thou shalt not assume "this" follows "that" when there is no logical
 connection. (Non sequitur)
 9.
 10. Thou shalt not argue that because a premise is popular, therefore it
 must be true. (Bandwagon fallacy)