pseudoteise
Pseudoteise is a term used in some scholarly and critical discourse to describe a proposition that is presented as a central thesis but lacks the evidentiary support or methodological grounding required for a legitimate thesis. The word is formed from pseudo- meaning false, and thesis, a proposition that an author intends to defend. In practice, pseudoteise refers to arguments that mimic the structure of a robust thesis—clear claim, supporting reasoning, anticipated objections—yet rely on superficial justifications, selective evidence, or rhetorical devices rather than systematic analysis. The concept is often invoked in debates about academic integrity, rhetorical criticism, and the evaluation of argumentative writing.
Etymology and usage: While not widely standardized, the term appears in online critique, pedagogy discussions, and
Relation to similar ideas: Pseudoteise is related to notions of pseudoscience, fallacies of unsound inference, and
See also: Pseudoscience, Logical fallacy, Argument quality, Thesis statement.
References: The term is chiefly encountered in informal discourse and is not a standard entry in major