Fallacies over Mein Kamph
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In Hitler's book, Mein Kampf his abundance of fallacies contributes to his weak writing style. Mein Kampf is a book with many fallacies that make Hitler's book Mein Kamph have a weak argument. The fallacies of hasty generalization, sweeping generalization, and argument to the people show that although he demeans the Jews and believes he is strong, in reality, he is weak, and it shows in his writing through his many fallacies.
During the writing of Mein Kampf Hitler uses hasty generalizations. A hasty generalization is a conclusion based on too little evidence. The reader sees that Hitler uses this fallacy many times.
One of the time Hitler uses this fallacy is when Hitler says, "I had last come to the conclusion that the Jew was no German" (29). This is not supported because he believes that a Jew cannot be a German when there are Jewish-Germans. A Jewish-German can be a person whose parents are Jewish and the person was born in Germany. So it is seen that this is a fallacy because what Hitler says is a conclusion based on too little evidence...