Logical fallacies are oftentimes totally relevant during anything that is not predicate logic. I'm not wrong for saying "The Surgeon General says smoking is bad, you shouldn't smoke." That's a perfectly reasonable appeal to authority.
It's still a fallacy, though. I hope we can agree on that part. If you have something map-reducing audio to timestamps of fallacies by who said them it makes it gamified and you can use the information shown to decide how much weight to give to their words.
It's still a fallacy, though. I hope we can agree on that part. If you have something map-reducing audio to timestamps of fallacies by who said them it makes it gamified and you can use the information shown to decide how much weight to give to their words.