Title: Claims and Critical Thinking
1Claims and Critical Thinking
- Claims are either true or false.
- Some sentences (even some nondeclarative ones)
make claims, but some (even some declarative
ones) do other things. - CRITICAL THINKING The careful, deliberate
determination of whether to accept, reject, or
suspend judgment about a claim and the degree
of confidence with which we accept or reject it.
2Skills Beneficial to Everyone
- Critical thinking is not about attacking and
defeating others its about helping them and
you. - Critical thinking is more a set of skills than a
set of facts.
3Skills Involved in Critical Thinking
- Careful listening and reasoning
- Finding hidden assumptions
- Tracing the consequences of claims
- Determining the credibility of sources
- Recognizing and avoiding various sorts of
rhetoric and pseudoreasoning - Analyzing and evaluating arguments
4Issues
- Issue a matter of controversy or uncertainty.
- Issues may be internal (between self and self) or
external (between self and others.) - Topics of conversation arent issues unless there
is controversy or uncertainty that the parties
are trying to resolve. - Critical thinking requires identifying the issue,
separating it from others and focusing on it. - Issues should be kept straight and dealt with in
proper order (efficiently.)
5Arguments
- Arguments are one of the ways used to settle
issues. - Arguments attempt to support a claim (the
conclusion) by giving reasons for believing it
(the premises.) - The issue is Whether or not the conclusion is
acceptable given the premises.
6Facts and Opinions
- Fact indicates that a claim is true.
- Opinion indicates that a claim is believed.
- Clearly, some opinions are factual and some
arent.
7Objectivity and Subjectivity
- An issue is factual or (objective) if there are
accepted means for settling it. - An issue is a matter of pure opinion (subjective)
if both sides could be correct. - Objective claims are true or false regardless of
our inner states while subjective claims are
usually just expressions of inner states. - Controversy alone does not make an issue
subjective equality of persons doesnt mean
equality of opinions. - Disputes may arise over whether certain types of
claims (e.g., moral ones) are objective or
subjective.
8Organizing an Argumentative Essay
- Make the focus clear at the beginning.
- Stick to the issue.
- Arrange the elements in a logical order.
- Be complete (easier with limited topics.)
9Good Writing Habits
- Outline after the first draft.
- Revise, revise, revise!
- Let others read and criticize.
- Read it out loud.
- When satisfied, put it aside for a while then
revise again!
10Essays to Avoid
- Windy preamble essays.
- Rambling stream-of-consciousness essays.
- Knee-jerk reaction essays.
- Glancing-blow essays.
- Let-the-reader-do-the-work essays.
11Clarity I Definitions
- A definition can serve different purposes to
stipulate, to explain, to precise and to
persuade. - Definitions can be by example, by synonym or
analytical (genus-species). - Abstract terms may not be completely definable.
- The literal meaning of a term is distinct from
its emotive force (the denotation is distinct
from the connotation.)
12Clarity II Ambiguity
- Ambiguous claims have more than one meaning in
the context. - In semantical ambiguity, specific words or
phrases have multiple meanings. - In syntactical ambiguity, the entire structure of
the sentence is at fault. - In grouping ambiguity, it isnt clear whether we
are talking about the members of a group
collectively or individually.
13Composition and Division Fallacies
- A composition fallacy occurs when we argue that
what holds true individually must hold true
collectively. - A division fallacy occurs when we argue that what
holds true collectively must hold true
individually.
14Clarity III Vagueness
- A claim is vague if it doesnt have a precise
enough meaning in the context. - Vagueness is a matter of degree.
- Fuzzy words (old, bald, rich) can produce
vagueness, but you can be vague even without them.
15Clarity IV Comparative Claims
- Is important information missing?
- Is the standard of comparison clear?
- Is the same standard being used?
- Are the same reporting and recording practices
being used? - Are the items really comparable?
- Is the comparison an average and, if so, what
kind (mean, median or mode)?
16When Should We Accept an Unsupported Claim?
- If it does not conflict with our observations,
our background knowledge or other credible
claims. - If it comes from a credible, unbiased source.
17Even Personal Observation Can Be Unreliable
- If the observing conditions are bad
- If the observer is distracted or impaired
- If the instruments used are faulty
18Other Factors Affecting Personal Observation
- Individual powers of observation
- Training and experience
- Beliefs, hopes, fears, expectations, bias
- Memory
- Even so, personal observation is usually the best
source of information we have we should accept
it unless we have a specific reason to challenge
it.
19Does the Claim Conflict with Background Knowledge
- The less conflict, the higher the initial
plausibility of the claim. - If there is conflict we can rightfully reject the
claim even without evidence from personal
observation. - Remember Some of your background beliefs are
surely wrong but you dont know which. - The broader your background knowledge the better!
20Assessing the Credibility of a Source Expertise
- Education
- Experience
- Accomplishments
- Reputation (especially among other experts)
- Position
- All, of course, in fields relevant to the issue.
21Why Experts Can Be Wrong
- Expertise can be bought
- The experts may disagree
- The subject may be such that none can claim
expertise.
22News Media
- Print provides broader coverage than electronic
- Newspapers may feel pressure from advertisers and
the local public - Headlines are sometimes misleading
- Size and location of the story may be
disproportionate to its importance - Opinion sometimes gets blended with facts
23Slanters
- These are the various linguistic devices commonly
used to attempt to persuade without argument. - They rely on
- the emotive force of words and phrases and/or
- linguistic manipulations that suggest hidden
meanings
24Words of Caution on Slanters
- Slanters are only bad when they are used to
mislead. - Slanters can be combined with perfectly good
reasoning (so dont throw the baby out with the
bath.) - Sometimes its wise and good to slant.
25Slanters I Emotive Force
- Euphemisms and Dysphemisms Its all in how you
describe it - Persuasive comparisons, definitions and
explanations or how you compare, define or
explain it. - Stereotypes Just read the label.
26Slanters II Linguistic Manipulation
- Innuendo I never said he was drunk
- Loaded questions These have unjustified hidden
assumptions (innuendo in interrogative dress) - Weaslers Watering down a claim
- Downplayers The verbal brush-off
- Hyperbole Extravagant overstatement
- Proof Surrogates Evidence that isnt
27Manipulating the Information I The News
- Most stories are given, not dug up sources must
not be offended. - Since the news media are private businesses, they
mustnt offend either advertisers or audiences. - The result is bias, oversimplification, passivity
and an overindulgence in entertainment. - We will get the news we want and pay for.
28Advertising
- General Question Does this ad give me a good
reason to buy the product? - General Answer Only if it establishes that I
will be better off with the product than without
it (or than with the money it will cost). - Keep in mind
- Wants should be distinct from needs
- Ads purposefully try to instill desires and fears
we previously lacked
29Three Ways Ads Lacking Reasons Can Persuade
- By associating the product with pleasurable
feelings - By associating the product with people we admire
or wish to be like - By associating the product with desirable
situations - Unless availability is all you need to know,
buying a product based on a reasonless ad is
never justified.
30What About Promise Ads that Supply Reasons?
- Claims in ads often come with no guarantees and
are notoriously vague, ambiguous, misleading,
exaggerated and wrong. - We only get the information the seller wants us
to have! - Our suspicions about ads in general justifies
suspicions about particular ads. - So even ads with reasons dont in themselves
justify a purchase.
31What Pseudoreasoning Is
- No grounds for accepting a claim are given even
though something approximating an argument may be
there. - Emotional appeals, factual irrelevancies and
persuasive devices are used to induce acceptance
of a claim.
32Types of Psedoreasoning
- Smokescreen/Red Herring
- Subjectivist Fallacy
- Common Belief
- Common Practice
- Peer Pressure/Bandwagon
- Wishful Thinking
- Scare Tactics
33More Pseudoreasoning
- Appeal to Pity
- Apple Polishing
- Horse Laugh/Ridicule/Sarcasm
- Appeal to Anger or Indignation
- Two Wrongs Make a Right
34Even More Pseudoreasoning
- Ad Hominem
- Personal Attack
- Circumstantial ad Hominem
- Pseudorefutation
- Poisoning the Well
- Genetic Fallacy
- Burden of Proof
35Some Oldies but Goodies
- Straw Man
- False Dilemma
- Perfectionist Fallacy
- Line-Drawing Fallacy
- Slippery Slope
- Begging the Question
36Arguments and Explanations
- We give an argument to try to settle whether some
claim is true. - We give an explanation to try to explain why some
claim is true.
37Argument or Explanation?
- Sometimes the writer doesnt know
- They use the same words and phrases (reason,
thats why, etc.) - The word explanation and its derivatives can
appear in arguments. - Explanations can be used in arguments.
- Sometimes it depends on the context and the
interests of those concerned.
38Explanations and Justifications
- A justification is an argument in defense of an
action. - Although justifications often include
explanations, explanations can also be neutral
regarding approval or disapproval. - So not every attempt to explain something is an
attempt to justify it explanations need not
imply approval.
39Kinds of Explanations
- Physical
- Behavioral
- Functional
40Physical Explanations
- These seek the physical background causing the
event in question. - The physical background consists of
- The general physical conditions (usually
unstated) - That link of the causal chain leading to the
event which, based on our interests and
knowledge, we take as the direct or immediate
cause of the event.
41Three Mistakes in Physical Explanations
- Tracing causal chains back too far
- Expecting reasons and motives behind all causal
chains. - Giving physical explanations at the wrong
technical level for the situation and/or audience.
42Behavioral Explanations I
- These attempt to explain behavior in terms of
psychology, political science, sociology,
history, economics or common-sense psychology. - The causal background is historical.
- Which factors (political, economic, social,
psychological) are important depends on our
interests and knowledge there is no single
correct explanation of any voluntary behavior.
43Behavioral Explanations II
- Recurring patterns of behavior require
theoretical explanations. - Expect more exceptions to generalizations about
behavioral regularities than to generalization
about regularities in nature. - These explanations can also be traced
inappropriately far and pitched at the wrong
technical level for the audience. - Explanations by reasons and motives look forward,
unlike physical explanations. - Dont confuse a reason (argument) for the reason
(explanation).
44Functional Explanations
- A functional explanation by puts a thing in a
wider context and then indicates the role it
plays in that context. - Actual and intended functions can differ.
- An item may have more than one function.
- Since functions usually depend on reasons and
motives, functional explanations are often
behavioral explanations in passive voice.
45Spotting Weak Explanations I
- Testability Beware of rubber ad hoc
explanations! - Noncircularity Some explanations just describe
the phenomena in different words. - Relevance Does the explanation allow us to make
predictions? - Not Too Vague Hes rude because hes out of
sorts. - Reliability Does it lead to false predictions?
46Spotting Weak Explanations II
- Explanatory Power The more it explains the
better (especially if its a theory!) - Freedom from Unnecessary Assumptions The fewer
the better. - Consistency with Well-Established Theory
- Absence of Alternative Explanations
47Explanatory Comparisons
- Analogies arent so much true or false as either
enlightening or unhelpful. - The best comparisons give us the greatest number
of close resemblances and the shortest list of
important differences. - The hearer must be familiar with both terms of
the comparison to understand and evaluate it.
48ArgumentConclusionPremises
- A claim can be the conclusion of one argument a
premise in another. - An argument may have an unstated premise or
conclusion. - Premises can support the conclusion dependently
or independently.
49Argument Terminology
- A good argument gives grounds for accepting the
conclusion a better argument gives more grounds. - A valid argument is one which, if we assume the
premises to be true, the conclusion cannot be
false. - A sound argument is a valid argument with true
premises. - A strong argument is one which, if we assume the
premises to be true, it is unlikely that the
conclusion will be false.
50Deduction and Induction
- Deductive arguments are valid or intended by
their authors to be valid. - Inductive arguments are neither valid nor
intended by their authors to be valid.
51Unstated Premises
- Is there a plausible claim that will make the
argument valid? - Is there a plausible claim that will make the
argument strong? - Be charitable in reconstructing the arguments of
others.
52Evaluating Arguments
- Do the premises support the conclusion?
- Are the premises reasonable?
53Deductive Logic
- Categorical (class) logic
- Truth-functional logic
54Standard FormCategorical Claims
- A All __ are __. (quantity universal, quality
affirmative) - E No __ are __. (quantity universal, quality
negative) - I Some __ are __. (quantity particular,
quality affirmative) - O Some __ are not __. (quantity particular,
quality negative) - The terms in the blanks must be nouns or noun
phrases (no bare adjectives)
55The Square of Opposition
- A and O propositions are contradictories, as are
E and I propositions (they never have the same
truth-value). - Assuming at least one member of the subject
class, A and E propositions are contraries (they
cant both be true) and I and O propositions are
subcontraries (they cant both be false).
56Categorical Operations
- Conversion Switch the subject and predicate
terms (valid for E and I but not for A and O) - Obversion Change the quality (e.g., affirmative
to negative) and replace the predicate term with
its complimentary term (e.g., dogs to nondogs) - Contraposition Convert then replace both terms
with their complimentary terms.
57Categorical Syllogisms
- A two-premise deductive argument in which every
claim is a standard form categorical claim (A, E,
I, or O). - Major term (P) The term that appears as the
predicate term of the conclusion. - Minor term (S) The term that occurs as the
subject term of the conclusion. - Middle term (M) The term that appears only in
the premises.
58Testing for Validity withVenn Diagrams
- Overlapping circles, minor term on left, major
term on right, middle term lower middle. - Shade out a section to show there is nothing
there and put an X in a section to indicate there
is something there. - Always shade before Xing diagram A and E
premises before I and O premises. - The argument is valid if, after diagramming the
premises you have already diagramed the
conclusion.
59Distribution Patterns
- A claim is said to distribute a term if it says
something about every member of the class denoted
by the term. - A Subject term only distributed.
- E Both terms distributed.
- I Neither term distributed.
- O Predicate term only distributed.
60The Rules Method of Testing for Validity
- The number of negative claims in the premises
must be the same as the number of negative claims
in the conclusion (1). - At least one claim must distribute the middle
term. - Any term that is distributed in the conclusion
must also be distributed in the premises.
61Inductive Arguments
- Inductive arguments attempt to establish the
likelihood (not certainty) of their conclusions
none are deductively valid. - They fall on a scale from very strong to very
weak depending on the degree of support provided
to the conclusion by the premises. - A basic inductive idea is that the more ways some
things are alike, the more likely it is that they
will be alike in some further way.
62The Basic Argument Pattern
- Analogical arguments compare individuals
inductive generalizations compare classes. - In both cases the basic argument pattern is
- Premise X has properties a, b, and c.
- Premise Y has properties a, b, and c
- Premise X has further property p.
- Conclusion Y also has further property p
63Terminology
- The property in question the property
ascribed in the conclusion - The sample the group whose members we know
have or dont have the property in question. - The target population the individual or group
about which we are seeking to know whether or not
they have the property in question (this may be a
subset of the sample.)
64Analogical Arguments
- The premises claim that one or more items have a
property, and the conclusion claims that some
similar item has that property. - Example The two Yugos Ive previously driven
were underpowered so this one will probably be
underpowered too.
65Factors Governing the Strength of Analogical
Arguments I
- As long as all the members of the sample have the
property in question, the larger the sample the
stronger the argument. - The greater the percentage of the sample that has
the property in question the stronger the
argument. - The greater the number of the similarities (and
the smaller the number of dissimilarities)
between the target and the sample the stronger
the argument.
66Factors Governing the Strength of Analogical
Arguments II
- With regard to a feature that, to our knowledge,
the target may or may not have, the more diverse
the sample the stronger the argument. - The less narrow the conclusion the stronger the
argument.
67Inductive Generalizations
- These always have a class as the target.
- The sample is always drawn from the target
population. - Basic idea If a part of a class has the property
in question then the class as a whole probably
has that property too. - The conclusion may refer to all, most, many, or
some specified percentage of the target
population.
68Representativeness and Bias
- A sample is representative of a target population
if it has all the relevant features of the target
in the same proportions. - A generalization not based on a representative
sample is untrustworthy. - An unrepresentative sample is called a biased
sample. - We can approximate a representative sample with a
random sample, one in which each member of the
target has the same chance of being in the
sample. - Random sampling error can occur even with an
unbiased sample.
69Sample Size, Error Margin, and Confidence Level
- The error margin is the range within which the
conclusion can be expected to fall. - The confidence level indicates the percentage of
random samples in which the property in question
falls within the error margin. - As the sample size increases, the error margin
will decrease or the confidence level will
increase or both.
70Criteria and Fallacies of Inductive
Generalizations
- The sample must be large enough to be
representative of the target population (if not,
Fallacy of Hasty Generalization.) - The sample must be unbiased with regard to
features relevant to the property in question (if
not, Fallacy of Biased Generalization.) - Basing a conclusion on a few clearly
unrepresentative cases is an extreme form of
hasty generalization called the Fallacy of
Anecdotal Evidence.
71Untrustworthy Polls
- Self-selected samples.
- Person-on-the-street interviews.
- Telephone surveys.
- Questionnaires
- Polls commissioned by advocacy groups.
- Push-polling.