The document discusses various types of logical fallacies: 1) Slippery slope fallacy assumes one action will lead to negative consequences without evidence. Affirming the consequent fallacy wrongly assumes evidence for one part of an "if-then" statement supports the other part. 2) Appeal to emotion uses feelings instead of facts. Argument from analogy assumes without justification. Equivocation changes the meaning of words to deceive. 3) Begging the question assumes the conclusion is true without evidence. Common belief or bandwagon fallacy assumes an argument is true because many believe it. Past belief assumes something is right just because it was practiced in the past.