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Writing%20Argument

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Title: Writing%20Argument


1
Writing Argument
2
To focus and refine the topic
  • ??(issue)???(topic)???
  • ????
  • ??????????,???????
  • ??????????(thesis)

3
  • Issue any topic of concern and controversy
  • The question at issue
  • Focus on one clear and precise question at issue

4
  • ?????????????????,?????????????????
  • A single issue may contain any number of separate
    and distinct questions as issue. Your task as a
    writer is to isolate a particular question at
    issue and stay focused on it.

5
The Thesis
  • The thesis states the writers position, her
    response to the question at issue, the conclusion
    of her argument, the primary claim she is making.
  • Your thesis takes central stage in both the final
    paper your write and the thinking you do as you
    conduct your research and prepare drafts. It
    controls the evidence you gather and clarifies
    the stand you want to take.

6
  • Sometimes when we begin exploring a topic for a
    paper, we may not know our position. We may need
    to learn more about the question at issue through
    research before arriving at a conclusion.
  • We dont necessarily have to arrive at a
    completely yes or no response to the question at
    issue.
  • Keep in mind that argument dont always have to
    be adversarial.

7
  • In essays by professional writers, the thesis is
    sometimes indirectly stated it may be implicit
    rather than explicit. In general, the more
    experienced the writer, the more she is able to
    write a focused essay without an explicit thesis.

8
In sum
  • Select an issue that is debatable, an issue on
    which you can argue more than one position.
  • Narrow that issue to a focused question at issue.
  • Write a working thesis that makes an assertion
    about this question at issue your thesis states
    your opinion on the question at issue.

9
Two kinds of thesis statements
  • Open thesis and complete thesis
  • A compromise (three examples of p.91)
  • Which thesis statement is preferable?
  • The complexity of the topic, the length of the
    paper, the needs of your audience, and the
    purpose of your project
  • A thesis is not necessarily restricted to one
    sentence.

10
Exercise identifying the issue, question at
issue, and thesis
  • ??lt???????gt,??????,???,September, 2006
  • ???????(topic) ,??(issue) ,????????(questions)
    ,???????(thesis)

11
  • ??
  • ??
  • ??(???????)
  • ??

12
Writing Process
  • WLTC, Ch.1 11-25
  • VR, Ch. 1 11-30
  • Class exercise 1. your writing process
  • 2. checklist for critiquing personal writing

13
  • To find a source of information
  • Clarify the writing goal
  • Writing from personal experience

14
  • The first thing to remember is that you are
    unique.
  • Things happen in the world that affect you, but
    they affect you in a specific way because you are
    yourself and not someone else.
  • The interplay of personal uniqueness and outside
    events can supply raw material for informative,
    worthwhile, and interesting essays.

15
  • Brainstorming
  • Free writing
  • Issue tress (????)

16
Peer feedback
  • ????????????????issues tress
  • ?????
  • ???????

17
Peer critiquing
  • Checking lists of pp.17-18
  • What did I find interesting?
  • What does it look like I can learn from this?
  • What insights caught my attention?
  • What sentence or section seemed best?
  • What sentence or section seemed weakest?
  • What parts would I like to see explained more?

18
  • What parts should be omitted?
  • What parts seemed real?
  • What part seemed phony?
  • What parts did the author really care about?
  • What part seemed worth writing an essay about?
  • What idea held the whole piece together?
  • What was the most important idea?
  • What idea might tie the different points together?

19
Drafting the essay
  • A draft is an attempt to impose structure on the
    ideas that you have been generating.
  • To create a first draft, study the comments that
    your peers have made in order to find a topic
    that is both interesting and productive.

20
shaping a written argumentrhetorical strategies
  • Rhetoric The art of using language to good
    effect, to prove, to convince, to persuade.
    (Aristotle)
  • ???
  • The introduction
  • The development of your argument
  • The conclusion

21
The Introduction
  • Background information
  • Relevant narrative that illustrates your question
    at issue,
  • --euthanasia a day in the life of a terminally
    ill patient
  • --a relevant quotation
  • --to open with an opposing view and build your
    argument on a refutation of what is often the
    prevailing wisdom on an issue

22
  • State your thesis somewhere in the introductory
    paragraphs so that your reader is clear about the
    purpose of the essay

23
The development of your argument
  • Thesis have to be elaborated, explained, and
    defended with as much specific detail, example,
    and illustration as your can provide.
  • You may draw on personal experience, research,
    and respected authorities to support your
    position.
  • Called the confirmation of your position, this
    support should be connected explicitly to your
    thesis unless the logical ties are self-evident.

24
  • A single premise paragraph (p.94)
  • A multipremise paragraph (p.95)
  • How many premises should an argument have?

25
The Conclusion
  • No simple rule of thumb
  • If your paper is long and complex, you need to
    help your reader by briefly summarizing where you
    have been and what your propose.
  • If you present only a tentative or partial thesis
    in the introduction, then you need to be sure
    that your final position is clear in the
    conclusion.

26
  • If you think that further investigation is still
    needed before you can arrive at a responsible
    conclusion on the issue, then recommend what
    direction you think such investigation should
    take.
  • If, as a result of your argument, you have
    definite recommendations for action, your
    conclusion can carry such suggestions.
  • ??

27
  • Every discourse, like a living creature, should
    be so put together that it has its own body and
    lacks neither head nor feet, middle nor
    extremities, all composed in such a way that they
    suit both each other and the whole. (Plato,
    Phaedrus)

28
The Dialectical Approach to Argument
  • Effective argument is more than the
    straightforward presentation of a thesis,
    premises, and their support. Most issues worth
    arguing today are complex, with evidence
    sometimes contradictory or ambiguous.
  • Interplay of conflict interweaving premises and
    counterarguments

29
  • What we agree with leaves us inactive, but
    contradiction makes us productive (Goethe)
  • To argue the to her side with a friend until you
    have found the answer to every point which might
    be brought up to against you (Roosevelt)
  • One mark of a maturing mind is the ability to
    take anothers point of view and thus be capable
    of considering two conflicting views on the same
    issue. (Piaget)

30
Addressing counterarguments
  • Pay careful attention to opposing views
  • How such strategies strengthen your own position
    (p.97)
  • How much counterargument?
  • In any case, a writer cannot ignore the most
    compelling opposing premises even if they provide
    the greatest challenge to the writers own view.

31
Refutation and concession
  • ????????,?98-99?
  • Rogerian strategy
  • Empathythe ability to see the expressed idea and
    attitude from the other persons point of view,
    to sense how it feels to him, to achieve his
    frame of reference in regard to the thing he is
    talking about

32
Essential triad in argument Logos, ethos, and
pathos (Aristotle)
  • Logos the argument itself
  • Ethos the disposition of the writer to present
    herself well
  • Pathos empathy with the audience

33
Logos
  • Logos refers to logical appeal, and in fact the
    term logic evolves from it. Logos normally
    implies numbers, polls, and other mathematical or
    scientific data.
  • Logos has many advantages
  • Data is hard to manipulate, meaning that it is
    harder to argue against a logos argument.
  • For the same reason, it may sway cynical
    listeners to the speaker's opinion.
  • Logos enhances ethos by making the speaker look
    prepared and knowledgeable to the audience.

34
  • Logos also has many disadvantages
  • Numbers may not be obvious to many listeners, so
    the argument may pass unheeded.
  • Logos asks the question, "But why should I care?"
    because they are not as involving as emotional
    appeal.
  • Logos can be downright confusing in some
    instances.
  • The best way to present an argument is to combine
    logos with the other forms of appeal.

35
Ethos
  • Ethos (????) is a Greek word originally meaning
    'the place of living' that can be translated into
    English in different ways. Some possibilities are
    'starting point', 'to appear', 'disposition' and
    from there, 'character'. From the same Greek root
    originates the word ethikos (??????), meaning
    'theory of living', and from there, the modern
    English word ethics is derived.

36
  • At first speakers must establish ethos. On the
    one hand, this can mean merely "moral
    competence", but Aristotle broadens this word to
    encompass expertise and knowledge. He expressedly
    remarks that ethos should be achieved only by
    what the speaker says, not by what people think
    of his character before he begins to speak. This
    position is often disputed and other writers on
    rhetoric state that ethos is connected to the
    overall moral character and history of the
    speaker.

37
Pathos
  • Pathos is from ÏÎσÏειν paschein, the Greek
    word meaning "to suffer" or "emotion." Pathos
    appeals to the audience's emotions.
  • Emotional appeal can be accomplished in a
    multitude of ways
  • by metaphor or story telling, common as a hook,
  • by a general passion in the delivery and an
    overall amount of emotional items in the text of
    the speech,
  • and as a closing device, where pathos can be
    particularly powerful.

38
  • The essential bond between writer and reader that
    leads to meaningful communication
  • To write convincing argument, you, the writer,
    must present yourself as a reasonable,
    sympathetic person at the same time that you
    convey respect for your readers.

39
For an effective argument
  • Express your thesis clearly
  • Support your own position a thoroughly as
    possible
  • Present relevant opposing views
  • Provide appropriate concessions and refutations
  • Develop empathy with your audience

40
Application to Writing
  • Logical joining of contrasting and concessive
    ideas
  • Exercise, p.103

41
More on Coherence
  • To develop rhetorical patterns of coherence
    throughout paper
  • To hold the different parts together by an almost
    invisible glue
  • Your thesis should guide you as you build
    paragraphs and create a thread that weaves its
    way from opening sentence to conclusion, each
    paragraph relating back to the thesis.

42
  • Every sentence should follow from the sentence
    before it each paragraph must follow logically
    from the one preceding it.
  • As a writer, you take your readers hand, never
    letting your reader stray from the flow of your
    argument.
  • If you were to cut your paper into individual
    paragraphs, shake them up, and throw them in the
    air, a stranger should have no difficulty putting
    them together in the original order.

43
  • To arrange points in a logical sequence, select
    joining conjunctions and major transitions
    carefully, and repeat or echo key words to keep
    your reader focused on your train of thought.
  • A caution coherent devices should not be
    heavy-handed or too obvious. Remember to go
    lightly on the major transitions. It is the
    logical progression of your ideas that is
    important, not the deployment of conjunctions
    alone.

44
?? identifying coherent strategies
  • Identifying the ways in which the writer has
    achieved coherence, both between sentences and
    between paragraphs. Explain the precise way in
    which each example works to create these links.

45
Identifying rhetorical features of argument
  • Thesis
  • Premises
  • Counterarguments
  • Concession and refutations used to address the
    counter arguments
  • Rogerian strategy

46
Four approaches to writing arguments
  • Arguing both sides of an issue
  • Taking a stand
  • Exploring on argument in depth
  • Collaborating on a complex issue

47
Arguing both sides of an issue
  • ????????????????????
  • ???????????????????????????

48
Taking a stand
  • A clear thesis to guide you as a writer and
    prepare your reader
  • Support for this thesisplenty of well-reasoned
    premises supported with examples, explanation,
    and analysis
  • Counterarguments with appropriate concessions and
    refutations
  • Sentences logically joined for contrast and
    concession, cause and effect, and coherence

49
Exploring an Argument in Depth
  • An introduction that presents the question at
    issue with appropriate background, acknowledges
    its complexity, and suggests your thesis even
    though you may not be taking a clear stand either
    pro or con
  • A detailed discussion of arguments for as many
    positions as possible

50
  • Refutations and concessions as appropriate for a
    thoughtful examination of alternatives
  • Your personal recommendation on the issue, based
    on an evaluation in which you weigh the strengths
    and weaknesses of the positions you have
    presented, a synthesis of them, a call for
    further investigation, or a summary of possible
    alternatives.
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