Professor Bill is in charge of his department funding allocations. A conference in Florida comes up that he is not particularly interested in attending. However, he is interested in taking a family vacation at Disney World. He allocates himself travel funds for the conference and uses the money to help pay for his trip to Disney. He feels slightly guilty about using the money in this manner, but shrugs it off by reminding himself that almost all professors misuse money from the travel budget. Having convinced himself, he believes there is nothing wrong with what he has done.Appeal to BeliefThe BandwagonAppeal to Common PracticeTwo Wrongs Make a RightAppeal to Belief is a wrong answer. Bill is not making an appeal to anyone's beliefs when he "justifies" his actions.The Bandwagon is a wrong answer. There is no attempt to offer a threat of rejection or exclusion from a peer group as evidence for a claim.Appeal to Common Practice is the right answer. In this example, Bill is "justifying" his actions by appealing to the fact that most everyone else does what he is planning on doing.Two Wrongs Make a Right is a wrong answer. Bill is not attempting to "justify" his actions by appealing to some wrong he has been dealt in the past nor does he appeal to a claim that someone else would do the same thing to him.In this example, Bill is claiming that other professors regularly do what he wants to do.3