Title: Interpreting the Motion:
1International Debate Education Association
- Interpreting the Motion
- Arguing About Definitions
2Why are Definitions of Words Important?
3Definitions in Debate
4Definition and Substance
- Arguing about definitions Has the government
team provided a reasonable definition of the
motion? - Arguing about substance Has the government team
offered substantive arguments in favor of the
motion?
5Why Argue About Definitions?
- Arguing about definitions provides a check
against trivial interpretations of a motion. - Arguing about definitions forces the government
team to focus on real substantive issues.
6ExampleResolved China should increase the
exploration of space.
- Increase spend 10 more RMB per year on
exploration - Space closets
- What kinds of arguments can you make about these
definitions and how they are unreasonable or not
substantive? - Why would it be important to object to these
definitions?
7ExampleResolved The United States should
adopt a policy to fight obesity.
- Adopt a Policy to enact a new law or
regulation - Fight to combat or resist
- Obesity overweight cats
- Which terms are reasonable and unreasonable?
8ExampleResolved China should expand
resources for rural education.
- Expand increase in size or scope
- Resources school buildings and educational
infrastructure - Rural non-urban communities
- Education formal programs to improve the
knowledge of the people - What kinds of arguments can you make about these
definitions and how they are unreasonable or not
substantive? - Is it worth the opposition teams time to object
to these definitions?
9Pitfalls of Arguing about Definitions
- From the perspective of debate as constructive
arguing - Time spent arguing about definitions is time not
spent arguing about important substantive ideas. - The point of debating is to argue about
substantive ideas. - From the perspective of debate competition
- Unless the opposition wins this issue clearly, it
will do them no good. - Arguing about definitions takes time away from
other issues debaters want to argue about.
10Achieving the Balance
- Government has the obligation to discuss the
substantive issues framed in the motion. - If the Government does address these issues, the
debate should proceed on their terms. - Only in the rare case where the Government does
not address the issues framed in the resolution,
should the focus of the debate shift from
substance to definition.
11The Governments Rights and Responsibilities
- Right to define the proposition
- The Government has the burden to prove the
resolution true. - This burden is partially offset by their right to
define the proposition as they see fit. - Responsibility to define the proposition in a
reasonable fashion - The government does not have to have a perfect
definition, just a reasonable one. - A reasonable definition is one that people would
find acceptable in most situations.
12Terms in the Charter
13Truism
- Definition a statement that is, by its very
nature, obviously true. If the government
defined terms in such a way as to force the
opposition to deny an indisputable fact, they
would be offering a truism. - Resolved Human beings should not kill.
- Government interpretation People should not
commit murder. - The problem The use of the term murder limits
the proposition in such a way that it makes it
harder to oppose.
14Tautology
- Definition A tautology is a statement that is
true by virtue of its logical nature. - Resolved The practice of lecturing is
over-emphasized in undergraduate education. - Government Interpretation The Government
defines lecturing as an instructors undue
reliance on his own words. - Problem The interpretation is tautological
because accepting the words undue reliance
means the method is over-emphasized.
Example taken from Branham, Robert Debate and
Critical Analysis The Harmony of Conflict (1991)
15Place Set
- Definition A restrictive place set restricts
the topic to an unnaturally restrictive
geographical or spatial location. - Resolved The United States should increase
funding for rural education. - Government Interpretation The Government
defines rural as Kirksville, Missouri. - Problem The definition significantly limits the
debate to a very specific area, with very unique
circumstances, about which the Opposition or
adjudicators might not have sufficient knowledge.
16Time Set
- Definition Setting an unnaturally restrictive
chronological duration. - Resolved The air conditioning should be
turned-up in all public buildings. - Government Interpretation It should be
turned-up for the duration of this debate. - Problem The interpretation isnt substantive.
It would only allow for consideration of the
immediate circumstances and not the effects of a
more consistent policy.
17How to Frame the Argument
- Identify the term you feel has been defined
unfairly. - Explain how the definition is either not
reasonable, or does not allow for substantive
debate. - Avoid being excessively critical! If the
definitions chosen by the Government can still
allow for a good debate, proceed with debating
the substantive issues.