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Personal Appeals are fallacies that persuade by appealing to
an individual listener. They seem to suggest that the listener ought to
accept a view, even if it isn't true or even if other reasoners would not
find it to be acceptable, merely because it is to the listener's personal
advantage to accept the view. Although these arguments can be used to
address a large, general audience (at least where everyone in the audience
is assumed to have common interests or a shared point of view), they often
seem to be best suited to one-on-one debates, where no one is around to
point out that the reasons offered are idiosyncratic and tailored to suit
the specific audience.
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