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Originally Posted by darryl
A very dubious appeal to authority indeed. I would be most surprised if your sister "the trial lawyer" shares your view of the doctrine of precedent. I'm going to stop beating my head against the wall of your ignorance of this topic.
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Yeah. What exactly is your expertise in this field? Are you a practicing attorney in the US, or is it mostly Google searches?
I don't think you understand what the appeal to authority fallacy actually is.
Here is the definition for the logically fallacious web site
Description: Using an authority as evidence in your argument when the authority is not really an authority on the facts relevant to the argument. As the audience, allowing an irrelevant authority to add credibility to the claim being made.
Referencing practicing lawyers and law classes about matters of law is not an appeal to authority fallacy. Referencing my high school teacher on the matter when he had not training on the law would be. One of the more common appeal to authority fallacy that one sees is citing a specific scientist on a matter that is not in his or her area of expertise.