Socio Errors in sociological inquiry
Premature closure of inquiry
Discounting the process of inquiry and observation because of the errors detailed above.
Appeals to tradition
A common fallacy in which a thesis is deemed correct on the basis that it is correlated with some past or present tradition.
Over- Generalization
Assuming that a few similar events are evidence of a general pattern.
Mystification
Attributing supernatural or mystical causes to all situations that seem to lack an explanation.
Ego-Involvement
Avoiding further inquiry because disproof of a personal observation may tend to make one look unintelligent or untrustworthy.
Inaccurate Observation
Failing to observe things right in front of us or mistakenly observing things that really aren't there.
Selective observation
Ignoring events or situations that don't correspond to a preconceived generalization.
Illogical reasoning
Reasoning away the observations that contradict accepted generalizations or conclusions.
Made up information
Thinking up ways to explain away the events that contradict generalizations.
Appeals to authority
Using an authority as evidence in your argument when the authority is not really an authority on the facts relevant to the argument.