See Also: - The New York Times. Retrieved 1 February 2017. Spotting Fallacies in Thinking, P. 101

You might also like

Download as docx, pdf, or txt
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 1

Recw

akaway, believing he would have a better chance of stopping a penalty shot. [11][12] Leggio later
used the tactic in the Deutsche Eishockey Liga, where he had played since 2015; that league
had not yet outlawed the maneuver,[13] but promptly did so after Leggio's first attempt at using the
tactic.[14] The DEL instead automatically awards the goal to the opposing team.[14] The National
Hockey League approved this rule in 2019.[15]

See also[edit]
 Ambit claim
 Bait-and-switch
 Creeping normality
 Destabilisation
 God of the gaps
 Mind games
 Nirvana fallacy
 No true Scotsman
 "They Just Keep Moving the Line", song
 Overton window
 Political suicide
 Special pleading
 Setting up to fail
 Slippery slope
 Texas sharpshooter fallacy
 Unsportsmanlike conduct

References[edit]
1. ^ Jump up to:a b "Moving the goalposts". Phrases.org.uk. Retrieved  2011-12-20.
2. ^ Safire, William (28 October 1990).  "On Language; Moving the Goalposts".  The New
York Times. Retrieved  1 February  2017.
3. ^ Clark, Jef et al. (2005). "Moving the goalposts," Humbug! The Skeptic’s Field Guide to
Spotting Fallacies in Thinking, p. 101.
4. ^ Hobbs, Jeremy. "Moving the Goal Posts," The New York Times, November 21, 2011;
retrieved 2013-2-19.
5. ^ Royal College of Psychiatrists, "On Bullying and Harassment" retrieved 2012-2-19.
6. ^ Field, Tim

You might also like