this question is appauling.
It's called begging the question. Also called circular logic.
Circular reasoning, or begging the question, is a fallacy where the conclusion is assumed in the premises. This means that the argument is not properly supporting the conclusion, and is essentially repeating the same idea in different words without providing evidence or support.
Begging the question is a logical fallacy in which the proposition to be proved is assumed implicitly or explicitly in the premise.
WTFiWWY - 2010 Begging the Question 2-16 was released on: USA: 3 June 2011
kdfnvkvlf
the start or origin
aurobindo gosh
it is actually called mendicant
No, it does not. It actually is called busking. Begging is when you only recieve, and in busking you trade your performance for people's money.
An example of begging the question fallacy would be: "You can't prove that ghosts don't exist because there is no evidence that ghosts don't exist." This argument assumes its conclusion (that ghosts exist) by using the lack of evidence against it as evidence in favor of it.
I think that the answer is : Begging the question