Lecture 1 Flashcards

1
Q

What is an arugment

A

It is a set of statements that includes ONE conclusion and ONE premise.
Premises: it supports the conclusion
Conclusion: is the statement being argued for

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2
Q

What are the 3 steps of arugment analysis?

A
  1. Identifying an argument: Is this author making
    an argument at all?
  2. Reconstructing an argument: What argument
    is this author making?
  3. Evaluating an argument: Is this a strong
    argument?
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3
Q

what are step 1 and 2?

A
  1. Identifying an argument: Not all writing/speaking contains arguments. Some is (e.g.):
    ● Purely descriptive: tells about event(s) or thing(s).
    ● Mere opinion: tells us the author’s opinion, but doesn’t give an argument for it
  2. Reconstructing an argument: Arguments are not always presented/written/stated in
    the clearest way.
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4
Q

what is step 3?

A

Does NOT concern:
Rhetorical power: is it convincing?
Literary merit: is it original/well-spoken
IS CONCERN:
Rational strength: does it provide a good reason to believe the conclusion?

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5
Q

TRUE OR FALSE: An argument can be BOTH rhetorically powerful and rationally strong?

A

True

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6
Q

What are the six ways that people deal with arguments?

A
  1. The Credulous Person: believes
    everything they hear.
  2. The Person of Contradiction:
    believes the opposite of
    everything they hear.
  3. The Dogmatist: holds onto their
    own opinions no matter what.
  4. The Skeptic: doesn’t believe
    anything.
  5. Relativists: think (somehow)
    everyone is right.
  6. Rational thinkers
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