This manual pertains to the Argumentation Schemes for Presumptive Reasoning, authored by Douglas Walton and published by Routledge. This work, released on November 5, 2013, delves into the evaluation of nondemonstrative arguments commonly encountered in informal logic and speech communication. It introduces argumentation schemes as structures of inference that facilitate the identification and assessment of everyday reasoning, particularly focusing on presumptive arguments that yield tentative conclusions. The book aims to provide a clear and systematic framework for understanding these schemes, offering 25 distinct types along with corresponding critical questions to guide evaluation.
The primary purpose of this manual is to serve as an indispensable tool for researchers, students, and educators in fields such as critical thinking, argumentation, speech communication, informal logic, and discourse analysis. It addresses the need for a precise and accessible analysis of argumentation schemes, particularly for presumptive reasoning, by presenting them as clearly defined structures. By equipping users with these schemes and critical questions, the manual enables a more effective and systematic evaluation of the acceptability and potential fallacies within common arguments encountered in discourse.
Recent concerns with the evaluation of argumentation in informal logic and speech communication center around nondemonstrative arguments that lead to tentative or defeasible conclusions based on a balance of considerations. Such arguments do not appear to have structures of the kind traditionally identified with deductive and inductive reasoning, but are extremely common and are often called "plausible" or "presumptive," meaning that they are only provisionally acceptable even when they are correct. How is one to judge, by some clearly defined standard, whether such arguments are correct or not in a given instance? The answer lies in what are called argumentation schemes -- forms of argument (structures of inference) that enable one to identify and evaluate common types of argumentation in everyday discourse.
This book identifies 25 argumentation schemes for presumptive reasoning and matches a set of critical questions to each. These two elements -- the scheme and the questions -- are then used to evaluate a given argument in a particular case in relation to a context of dialogue in which the argument occurred.
In recent writings on argumentation, there is a good deal of stress placed on how important argumentation schemes are in any attempt to evaluate common arguments in everyday reasoning as correct or fallacious, acceptable or questionable. However, the problem is that the literature thus far has not produced a precise and user-friendly enough analysis of the structures of the argumentation schemes themselves, nor have any of the documented accounts been as helpful, accessible, or systematic as they could be, especially in relation to presumptive reasoning. This book solves the problem by presenting the most common presumptive schemes in an orderly and clear way that makes them explicit and useful as precisely defined structures. As such, it will be an indispensable tool for researchers, students, and teachers in the areas of critical thinking, argumentation, speech communication, informal logic, and discourse analysis.
Author: Walton, Douglas
Publisher: Routledge
Illustration: n
Language: ENG
Title: Argumentation Schemes for Presumptive Reasoning
Pages: 00232 (Encrypted EPUB)
On Sale: 2013-11-05
SKU-13/ISBN: 9780805820720
Category: Language Arts & Disciplines : Communication Studies
Recent concerns with the evaluation of argumentation in informal logic and speech communication center around nondemonstrative arguments that lead to tentative or defeasible conclusions based on a balance of considerations. Such arguments do not appear to have structures of the kind traditionally identified with deductive and inductive reasoning, but are extremely common and are often called "plausible" or "presumptive," meaning that they are only provisionally acceptable even when they are correct. How is one to judge, by some clearly defined standard, whether such arguments are correct or not in a given instance? The answer lies in what are called argumentation schemes -- forms of argument (structures of inference) that enable one to identify and evaluate common types of argumentation in everyday discourse.
This book identifies 25 argumentation schemes for presumptive reasoning and matches a set of critical questions to each. These two elements -- the scheme and the questions -- are then used to evaluate a given argument in a particular case in relation to a context of dialogue in which the argument occurred.
In recent writings on argumentation, there is a good deal of stress placed on how important argumentation schemes are in any attempt to evaluate common arguments in everyday reasoning as correct or fallacious, acceptable or questionable. However, the problem is that the literature thus far has not produced a precise and user-friendly enough analysis of the structures of the argumentation schemes themselves, nor have any of the documented accounts been as helpful, accessible, or systematic as they could be, especially in relation to presumptive reasoning. This book solves the problem by presenting the most common presumptive schemes in an orderly and clear way that makes them explicit and useful as precisely defined structures. As such, it will be an indispensable tool for researchers, students, and teachers in the areas of critical thinking, argumentation, speech communication, informal logic, and discourse analysis.
Author: Walton, Douglas
Publisher: Routledge
Illustration: n
Language: ENG
Title: Argumentation Schemes for Presumptive Reasoning
Pages: 00232 (Encrypted EPUB)
On Sale: 2013-11-05
SKU-13/ISBN: 9780805820720
Category: Language Arts & Disciplines : Communication Studies