PHI332 : The Class : Argument ID : Premise Conclusion
Some of you, I know, will feel that this sort of nitpicking is too much trouble! I agree that it can be a lot of bother. I have only admiration for people who, without needing to trouble to understand their own or others' reasoning, nevertheless can become conscious of having strong opinions about what's right and wrong-that is, about ethics.
Others of you will find you actually enjoy developing your powers of argument analysis. You will feel you are developing a power to detect "horse feathers," "poppycock," "piffle," or what we vulgarly call bull [manure]! You are right, and I agree with you that this is a valuable power for any human being to have, especially one training to lead conversations in health care issues. It gets even better than this, for soon enough we will start, not only to identify arguments, but to evaluate them. I'm guessing that you have already been unable to resist evaluating some of the arguments we are identifying as better or worse. But for now let's just identify the arguments in diagrams. Now back to work!
It is not unusual for conclusions themselves to be premises, leading to other conclusions. Consider this example (from p. 64, the numbers are in the text):
To complete this topic successfully, do as many of the following exercises as you find necessary to acquire the relevant skill. You have acquired the relevant skill when your answers to exercises are reliably either the same as the given answers or are alternative answers you can explain and defend:
ASSIGNMENT 1: Exercise2.5.1
ASSIGNMENT 2: Exercise2.5.2
ASSIGNMENT 3: Exercise2.5.3
ASSIGNMENT 4: Exercise2.5.4
ASSIGNMENT 5: Exercise2.5.5
ASSIGNMENT 6: Exercise2.5.6
Go on to Topic
6: Logic Puzzle
or
Go back to Argument
ID
E-mail George Rudebusch at George.Rudebusch@nau.edu
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