Title: Strategies for Assessing Arguments
1Chapter 5
- Strategies for Assessing Arguments
2Strategies for Assessing Arguments
- There are essentially two main ways to assess
arguments - The fallacies approach
- The criterial approach
3Strategies for Assessing Arguments
- The fallacies approach
- A fallacy (defn) is a mistake in reasoning.
- According to this approach, we assess the
soundness of an argument by determining if the
reasoning employed in the argument commits any
fallacies. - Many of the more common fallacies have their own
names.
4Strategies for Assessing Arguments
- E.g., argumentum ad misericordiam (appeal to
pity) - Student to teacher I ought to get an A on this
paper. After all, I need an A average to keep my
scholarship.
5Strategies for Assessing Arguments
- The criterial approach
- This approach looks at the criteria a good
argument must satisfy true premises and logical
strength. - What are the criteria by which we determine
whether the premises are true, and whether the
reasoning employed has logical strength.
6Strategies for Assessing Arguments
- There are 3 criteria to a sound argument
- 1. The premises must be acceptable
- Are the premises true? Are they probable?
- 2. The premises must be relevant
- Are the premises relevant to the conclusion?
Even if the premises are true, and they relevant
to the conclusion that is being drawn? - 3. The premises must be adequate
- And even if the premises are true and relevant,
are they adequate by themselves to yield the
conclusion, or does more need to be added?
77 Rules in Assessing Arguments
- Identify the main conclusion
- Identify the premises
- Identify the structure of the argument
- Check the acceptability of the premises
- Check the relevance of the premises
- Check the adequacy of the premises
- Look for counter-arguments
8Chapter 6
9Theories of Truth
- The 4th rule requires that we assess the
acceptability of the premises i.e., determine
whether the premises are true, or likely to be
true. - But what is truth?
10Theories of Truth
- There are several competing theories of truth
theories about the nature of truth, and how it
works. - The 3 most commonly held are
- Correspondence
- Coherence
- Pragmatic
11The Correspondence Theory of Truth
- This is probably the most widely held and
intuitively plausible account of truth - This theory states a statement is true iff it
corresponds to the facts. - E.g.
- There are 10 coins in my pocket is true iff it
is a fact that there are 10 coins in my pocket.
12The Correspondence Theory of Truth
- The main thought behind this theory is that there
are facts which make statements true, which the
statements correspond to. - Some problems
- What about negative statements?
- There are no potatoes in this room.
- What about moral statements?
- You ought to keep your promises.
- What about counterfactuals?
- If Hitler had died in 1928, there would not have
been WWII. - What about statements about nonexistent entities?
- There are no unicorns.
13The Correspondence Theory of Truth
- Some more problems
- What is a fact?
- What is correspondence?
- And, dont we already have to have the notion of
truth in order to assess correspondence?
14The Correspondence Theory of Truth
- Nevertheless
- The correspondence theory seems to be a workable
model for empirical statements, so long as we
accept that there are empirical facts. - An empirical fact is a fact that is in principle
observable.
15The Coherence Theory of Truth
- This theory states a statement is true iff
coheres with my other beliefs. - According to this theory, the reason we hold any
particular statement to be true is because there
are other beliefs that we have which justify our
belief that it is true. - I believe A is true because of belief B, and B is
true because of belief C, etc.
16The Coherence Theory of Truth
- The main thought behind this theory is not
correspondence, but rather consistency. - Two (or more) statements are said to be
consistent (defn) iff they can be held true at
the same time. - The reason we accept any particular statement is
because it is consistent with our other beliefs.
If it is not consistent, then it is rejected as
false. - Coherence is an internal criterion of truth,
while correspondence is an external criterion.
17The Coherence Theory of Truth
- Problem
- Granted, if all your beliefs are true, they will
form a consistent system - But it does not follow that if your beliefs are
consistent that they are all true! (i.e., you
could have a consistent set of beliefs that are
all false).
18The Coherence Theory of Truth
- E.g.
- Dogs are birds, Birds have 4 legs, All
4-legged creatures are crustaceans - The sentence Dogs are crustaceans coheres with
the sentences in the above set, but clearly it is
not true! - Why not? It doesnt correspond to the facts?
19The Pragmatic Theory of Truth
- This theory states a statement is true iff it
leads to the successful solution to a real
problem. - Or better a statement is true iff it works.
- One of the thoughts behind this theory is that
the nature of reality is not something that we
have direct access to, and that there is no way
to compare our beliefs with how things really are
(i.e., pragmatists reject the correspondence
theory).
20The Pragmatic Theory of Truth
- Nevertheless we have to cope with our
environment. - Therefore, take as true those statements which
help us cope.
21The Pragmatic Theory of Truth
- E.g.
- There is some debate in science as to the nature
of quantum theory. - Since we are dealing with stuff that is really
really small, we cannot empirically verify it.
(cannot use correspondence) - Quantum theory notoriously contravenes some of
our most strongly held logical and physical
convictions (i.e., does not cohere with other
beliefs) - Nevertheless is it extremely accurate in making
predictions. - It is because of this usefulness, its
instrumental value, that it is accepted by
scientists as true.
22The Pragmatic Theory of Truth
- Some problems
- Some statements arent useful at all, but
nevertheless are clearly true. - Isnt it because a sentence is true that it is
useful, and not the other way around?
23Theories of Truth
- Despite the problems with these 3 theories, when
assessing truth, we should be on the look out for
these following features - Can it be empirically verified?
- If not, does it cohere with the rest of my
beliefs?
24Types of Truth Claims
- The truth or falsity of a statement is
independent of our knowledge of its truth or
falsity. - If we can determine that a statement is true,
then it has been verified (it is true, and we
know it is true). - If we can determine that a statement is false,
then it has been falsified (it is false, and we
know it is false). - If we cannot determine whether a statement is
true or false, then it is undetermined. - If a statement is undetermined, it is still
either true or false, we just do not know, or
possibly cannot know, which.
25Types of Truth Claims
- There are two main types of truth claims
- Empirical
- Non-empirical
26Empirical Truth Claims
- A claim is an empirical claim if it can verified
by checking the facts. - E.g.
- There are at least 10 books in my office.
- My car is blue.
- Mt. Everest is the tallest mountain on earth.
27Empirical Truth Claims
- Some empirical claims are easier to verify (or
falsify) than others. - E.g.
- England will beat Switzerland tomorrow
- It was 12 degrees in Antigonish 150 years ago.
- There is life on other planets.
28Empirical Truth Claims
- These examples are about things in the past, the
future, or places that are too far away. - Those examples are clearly empirical claims. We
can verify their truth by empirical factsthe
problem is that we do not have direct access to
those facts. - These claims will have to be verified indirectly.
29Empirical Truth Claims
- Besides particular empirical claims (about books
in my office, or the colour of my car, or the
weather in Antigonish on a particular date),
there are also general empirical claims. - 2 types of general empirical claims
- statistical empirical claims
- universal empirical claims
30Statistical Empirical Claims
- These are claims that talk about part of or some
proportion of a class of things. - E.g.
- The majority of philosophy majors are male.
- A quarter of Blue Jays die within the first year
of their life.
31Statistical Empirical Claims
- Statistical empirical claims can be verified
without having to check every particular fact.
E.g., we dont have to examine every philosophy
major, or every Blue Jay. - These claims can be verified using statistical
information. - In particular, these claims are verified by using
inductive generalizations generalizing from a
sample to the whole.
32Universal Empirical Claims
- These are claims that talks about ALL of a class.
- E.g.
- All diamonds have a refractive index of 2.417
- All swans are white.
33Universal Empirical Claims
- Unlike statistical claims, universal claims can
be falsified by a single exception. - If there is one diamond which does not have a
refractive index of 2.417, then the claim All
diamonds have a refractive index of 2.417 is
false. - But of course if there is one Blue Jay which does
not die before it is 12 months old, you havent
shown anything about A quarter of Blue Jays die
within the first year of their life.
34Universal Empirical Claims
- Universal empirical claims therefore cannot be
verified (in principle), but they can be
falsified. - We could tentatively accept a universal empirical
claim if the attempt to falsify it fails, but
that acceptance should always be tentative.
35Non-empirical Truth Claims
- Non-empirical truth claims are truth claims which
arent empirical. - That is, they are claims which cannot be verified
(or falsified) by evidence that comes to us from
our senses.
36Non-empirical Truth Claims
- There are many sorts of such claims
- Analytic and contradictory statements
- Ethical statements
- Aesthetic statements
- Religious statements
- Foundational (first) principles
37Acceptability
- The question we need to ask when assessing a
premise of an argument is Are we justified in
accepting it? - There are various standards of acceptability of
truth-claims. - These standards will depend on the type of claim
as well as the context.
38Acceptability
- Strict proof this is the most demanding
standard. - This standard in common in mathematics, logic and
some sciences, e.g. - Common knowledge these have the least demanding
standard. - Nevertheless, they can sometimes be challenged.
39Common knowledge
- If common knowledge is challenged
- Determine why it is being challenged
- Is your interlocutor merely wasting your time
- Or is the argument precisely about this sort of
claim (philosophy, e.g., is notorious for
challenging claims that are thought to common
sense) - Context will usually determine this
- If the claim is not common knowledge, be prepared
to offer the evidence as is required by the
context.