1 - Thou shalt not assume a hypothesis requiring an action is more valid than the null hypothesis.
2 - Thou shalt provide a premise that can be causally linked to your proposed conclusion.
3 - Thou shalt not assume what is popular is correct (bandwagon fallacy /argumentum ad populum)
4 - Thou shalt not use a premise that is predicated on its conclusion (circular reasoning)
5 - Thou shalt not assume an argument is ridiculous without providing a proof why (appeal to the stone)
6 - Thou shalt not use reasoning based on your feelings alone (appeal to emotion)
7 - Thou shalt not use legislation, respected senior members of a field of study, or a ruler as sole justifications for an argument (appeal to authority)
8 - Thou shalt not use traditions to justify an argument. (appeal to tradition).
9 - Thou shalt not attempt to discredit an argument by insulting those making it. (ad hominem).
10 - Thou shalt not use an individual's hypocrisy as a sole reason to discredit their argument (tu quoque).
11 - Thou shalt not presume that the whole is the same as is parts, or vice versa, without empirical proof. (composition /division fallacy)
12 - Thou shalt not change the nature or conclusion of an argument to prove its correctness (moving goalposts).
13 - Thou shalt not dismiss evidence because of its source alone (genetic fallacy).
14 - Thou shalt not justify or dismiss an argument by appealing to the purity of a subject/object (no true Scotsmen fallacy)
15 - Thou shalt not presume only your proposed options exist without logical proof of this. (false dichotomy)
16 - Thou shalt not presume the cause of an event is its only cause without proof (false cause)
17 - Thou shalt not presume because something is natural it must be good (appeal to nature).
18 - That shalt not use only personal experience to justify or dismiss an argument (anecdotal fallacy)
19 - Thou shalt not claim a compromise between extremes is the most logical solution. (middle ground fallacy)
20 - Thou shalt not presume without a proof that because an argument is argued poorly it is wrong. (fallacy fallacy)
21 - Thou shalt not presume an argument is wrong because you believe it to be wrong (personal incredulity)
22 - Thou shalt not ask questions which presume one action is inherently better than another (loaded question fallacy)
23 - Thou shalt not try to make someone disprove their own claim by researching yours (burden of proof fallacy)
24 - Thou shalt not use ambiguous terms to justify a premise. (ambiguity fallacy)
25 - Thou shalt not assume an argument is statistically significant because it can occur. (gambler fallacy)