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Argumentation: A Primer

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Title: Argumentation: A Primer


1
Argumentation A Primer
  • Happiness is when everyone agrees that Im
    right!

2
What is Argumentation?
  • Argumentation -- clear thinking, logic to
    convince reader of the soundness of a particular
    opinion on a controversial issue.
  • Persuasion -- emotions used to convince reader to
    take a particular action.
  • Persuasion and argumentation are often combined.

3
Arguments must have the following
  • Logos
  • Ethos
  • Pathos

4
Logos
  • "Logos" or soundness of argument -- facts,
    statistics, examples, and authoritative
    statements to support viewpoint.
  • Evidence must be unified, specific, sufficient,
    accurate, and representative. This is the main
    strength of the argument.

5
Pathos
  • "Pathos" -- appeals to readers' needs, values,
    and attitudes, encouraging them to commit
    themselves to a viewpoint or course of action.
  • Pathos is derived from language (connotative --
    strong emotional overtones).

6
Ethos
  • "Ethos" -- credibility and integrity. Prove to
    the reader that you're knowledgeable and
    trustworthy.
  • Give a balanced approach, acknowledge differing
    points of view give lots of support for your
    viewpoint.

7
There are two basic types of reasoning
  • Inductive reasoning -- draw a conclusion from
    using specific details.
  • (Small to big)
  • Deductive reasoning -- apply a generalization to
    a specific case.
  • (Big to small)

8
There are lots of things to consider.
  • First There are perfectly wonderful, reasonable,
    intelligent people who disagree with you
    absolutely. (And there are dunderheads who may
    agree with you.) The moral judge the argument,
    not the person.

9
Know what you know.
  • You need to be certain of what you know as well
    as of what you are uncertain -- that knowledge
    affects your use of proofs as well as your use of
    language.

10
Dont offend.
  • Goodwill -- readers are more likely to listen to
    an argument if it is reasoned, cool, calm, and
    relatively dispassionate.
  • Focus on the issues, not the reader or opponent.

11
Know the history.
  • Be able to identify the controversy of your issue
    and why there is a controversy in the first place.

12
Know all sides.
  • You should be able to see the validity of both
    (all) sides of an issue.
  • Also, you should be able to determine what the
    two sides may agree on.

13
What can you do with both sides?
  • Refutations -- restate opposing points of view,
    acknowledge the validity of some of the arguments
    given by opponents, point out common grounds,
    present evidence for your position.
  • You must be able to refute the opposition in
    order to have a strong argument (and get an A
    on your essay).

14
Things to avoid
  • faulty conclusions, post hoc fallacy
    (cause-effect sequential but not related) non
    sequitur fallacy (conclusion has no connection to
    evidence) ad hominem argument (attach person
    rather than point of view)

15
More things to avoid
  • faulty authority (when authority is in doubt)
    begging the question (reader expected to accept a
    controversial premise without proof) false
    analogy (two things share all characteristics if
    they share only a few) either-or fallacy
    (viewpoint can only have one of two solutions)
    red herring argument (deflect attention).

16
Structure
  • There is no one better way to structure an
    argument. Whatever works, whatever is actually
    convincing, is the right way to do it.
  • Do consider the Rogerian method, however,
    because it does contain all elements of a strong
    argument.

17
More stuff to think about
  • Always be thorough. Find out what you dont know
    -- do your research -- and dont spout nonsense.
  • Avoid loaded words and prejudicial statements --
    generalizations that are vague and often
    misleading and inaccurate.

18
Language issues
  • Vary sentences structure.
  • Be aware of homonyms.
  • Be aware of transitions.
  • Be aware of connotations and denotations.
  • Have a clearly identifiable thesis.

19
Things to remember.
  • Avoid announcements. Please never say something
    like, In this paper I will discuss That is
    fine for papers written in science or math
    classes, but it is not acceptable in an English
    class.

20
Possible Beginnings
  • Broad statement narrowing to a limited subject
    (end introduction with thesis statement)
  • Brief anecdote leading up to thesis
  • Comparative or opposite ideas leading up to
    thesis
  • Series of short questions leading to thesis
  • Quotes leading to thesis
  • Refutation of a common belief leading up to a
    thesis
  • Dramatic fact or statistic leading to thesis

21
Possible Conclusions
  • Summary of information presented (useful if your
    argument is long and/or complicated)
  • Prediction based on information presented
  • Quotation leading to concluding statement
  • Statistics leading to concluding statement
  • Recommendation or call for action

22
Double Check These
  • Does the paper answer the assignment given?
  • Does the paper address your audience?
  • Does the paper have the appropriate tone?
  • Does the paper serve the purpose intended?
  • Is the thesis clear and easily understood?
  • Add information where it appears to lack
    adequate support.

23
More to remember
  • Delete useless or confusing information.
  • Do all of the supporting statements actually
    support the thesis?
  • Are clear transitions used between thoughts,
    ideas, paragraphs?
  • Are the introduction and conclusion adequate and
    appropriate?
  • Is your organization systematic and methodical
    (consistent throughout the paper)?

24
More to consider
  • Consider sentence structure and length.
  • Reconsider word choice. Never use profanity or
    slang. Always identify abbreviations.
  • Proofread for correct grammar, punctuation,
    typing errors.
  • REPEAT ALL OF THIS UNTIL YOU ARE SATISFIED (or
    cannot stand to look at it anymore).

25
Last Items
  • Give your paper a title
  • Make sure that your paper is on correct paper
    stock, typed, and legible.
  • Make sure that your paper is properly identified
    with your name, course title, date, and paper
    title
  • Make a copy of your paper and keep it as a record
    for yourself
  • Turn in your paper on time
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