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Philosophy

1997

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Commentary On Hayes, A Francisca Snoeck Henkemans May 1997

Commentary On Hayes, A Francisca Snoeck Henkemans

OSSA Conference Archive

No abstract provided.


Commentary On Hicks, Eveline Feteris May 1997

Commentary On Hicks, Eveline Feteris

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No abstract provided.


Differences Between Argumentative And Rhetorical Space, Ralph Johnson May 1997

Differences Between Argumentative And Rhetorical Space, Ralph Johnson

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The issue I address in this paper is the age-old problem of the relationship between logic and rhetoric. More specifically, I ask the question, how do logic and rhetoric differ in their approaches to the study of argumentation? What makes this question timely are the changes that logic has undergone in the last 25 years. In this paper, I develop the idea that an argument is the central event in what I call argumentative space. I present a conception of argumentative space as a subspace within rational space and seek to provide a rough characterization of the main features of …


Commentary On Russell, Richard Feldman May 1997

Commentary On Russell, Richard Feldman

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No abstract provided.


Rhetoric And Reason In The Civil Science Of Thomas Hobbes, William Mathie May 1997

Rhetoric And Reason In The Civil Science Of Thomas Hobbes, William Mathie

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In successive versions of Hobbes's political teaching we see a changing account of the nature of rhetoric, or eloquence, and of the dangers it poses for political life. In his Leviathan Hobbes expresses a new confidence that the causes of political dissolution can in principle be entirely eradicated. I argue that Hobbes's new hope is based on his account of the problem of rhetoric and of the solution to that problem developed in Leviathan. I also examine two recent and important accounts of Hobbes's understanding of rhetoric by Quentin Skinner and David Johnston.


Persuasion Monologue, Chris Reed, Derek Long May 1997

Persuasion Monologue, Chris Reed, Derek Long

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The emphasis in most process-oriented models of argumentation is placed heavily upon analysis of dialogue. The current work puts forward an account which examines the argumentation involved in persuasive monologue, drawing upon commitment-based theories of dialogue. The various differences between monologue and dialogue are discussed, with particular reference to the possibility of designing a monologue game in which commitments are dynamically incurred and updated as the monologue is created. Finally, the computational advantages of adopting such an approach are explored in the context of an existing architecture for the generation of natural language arguments.


Disputation By Design, Sally Jackson May 1997

Disputation By Design, Sally Jackson

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In normative pragmatics, a kind of empirical discourse analysis organized by normative theory, the analysis of any communication process begins with an idealized model of the discourse that can be compared with actual practices. Idealizations of argumentation can be found, among other places, in theoretical descriptions of 'critical discussion' and other dialogue types. Comparing ideal models with actual practices can pinpoint defects in the models (leading to theoretical refinements), but it can also identify deficiencies in practice. This latter possibility invites redesign around well-justified idealizations. This paper outlines an approach to the design of discourse processes and illustrates the approach …


Persuasive Definition, Andrew Aberdein May 1997

Persuasive Definition, Andrew Aberdein

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Charles Stevenson introduced the term 'persuasive definition' to describe a suspect form of moral argument 'which gives a new conceptual meaning to a familiar word without substantially changing its emotive meaning'. However, as Stevenson acknowledges, such a move can be employed legitimately. If persuasive definition is to be a useful notion, we shall need a criterion for identifying specifically illegitimate usage. I criticize a recent proposed criterion from Keith Burgess-Jackson and offer an alternative.


Arguing From Ignorance, Jonathan Adler May 1997

Arguing From Ignorance, Jonathan Adler

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Arguments from ignorance should be schematized: It has not been proven false that p. So it is possible that p. So, it is reasonable to believe p. Also, in opposition to standard views they should be distinguished from burden of proof and absence of evidence arguments. Much of the persuasiveness of such arguments can be located in the slippery uses of "possible." Besides equivocations on "possible" the argument is a fallacy for two reasons. First, the possibility implied by the first premise does not yield the serious possibility that is needed for establishing the conclusion. Second, ignorance is never sufficient …


Should We Assess The Basic Premises Of An Argument For Truth Or Acceptability?, Derek Allen May 1997

Should We Assess The Basic Premises Of An Argument For Truth Or Acceptability?, Derek Allen

OSSA Conference Archive

In this paper I challenge the currently fashionable view that we should assess the basic premises of an argument for acceptability rather than for truth, and argue in favour of recognizing premise-truth as a criterion of argument goodness in one important sense and premise-acceptability as a criterion of argument goodness in another important sense.


Commentary On Allen, Ralph H. Johnson May 1997

Commentary On Allen, Ralph H. Johnson

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No abstract provided.


Claim Strength And Burden Of Proof, Jeremy Bailenson, Lance J. Rips May 1997

Claim Strength And Burden Of Proof, Jeremy Bailenson, Lance J. Rips

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In this paper, we report results from experiments in which people read conversational arguments and then judge (a) the convincingness of each claim and (b) the individual speakers' burden of proof. The results showed an "anti-primacy" effect: People judge the speaker who makes the first claim as having greater burden of proof. This effect persists even when each speaker's claims are rated equally convincing. We also find that people rate claims less convincing when they appear in the first part of an argument than when they appear in isolation.


Commentary On Blair, Erik C W Krabbe May 1997

Commentary On Blair, Erik C W Krabbe

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No abstract provided.


Aristotle’S Treatment Of Fallacious Reasoning In Sophistical Refutations And Prior Analytics, George Boger May 1997

Aristotle’S Treatment Of Fallacious Reasoning In Sophistical Refutations And Prior Analytics, George Boger

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Aristotle studies syllogistic argumentation in Sophistical Refutations and Prior Analytics. In the latter he focuses on the formal and syntactic character of arguments and treats the sullogismoi and non-sullogismoi as argument patterns with valid or invalid instances. In the former Aristotle focuses on semantics and rhetoric to study apparent sullogismoi as object language arguments. Interpreters usually take Sophistical Refutations as considerably less mature than Prior Analytics. Our interpretation holds that the two works are more of a piece than previously believed and, indeed, that Aristotle's treatment of fallacious reasoning presupposes the results of the formal theory.


The Rhetorical Burden Of Expert Witnesses, Neil M. Browne, Terri J. Keeley, W J. Hiers May 1997

The Rhetorical Burden Of Expert Witnesses, Neil M. Browne, Terri J. Keeley, W J. Hiers

OSSA Conference Archive

When judges and juries hear from expert witnesses, what exactly do they expect to hear? In other words, as an audience what purpose do they have for the communication? Just what rhetorical burden is the expert expected to bear? The theme of our paper is that the Frye and Daubert rules that dominate legal argument about the use of expert witnesses are both flawed. Neither shows adequate respect either for what Billig calls "the argumentative aspect of social life" or the inescapable hermeneutic and perspectival problems highlighted by the rhetoric-of-the-human-sciences movement.


Argument As An Act Of Friendship, Neil M. Browne, R G. Hausmann May 1997

Argument As An Act Of Friendship, Neil M. Browne, R G. Hausmann

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Those who are said to argue are typically seen as annoying, domineering types who treat conversation as a duel in which the goal is in the words of Gerry Spence's recent bestseller, "to win every time." The most immediate manifestation of this resistance to argument as both inescapable and healthful comes from our students; even when they learn to appreciate and evaluate tropes at an advanced level, they still often wonder aloud, "Should I engage openly in argument?" This paper aspires to paste a happy face on the practice of argument as a partial antidote to this resistance.


Eunoia On The Internet?: Usenet Newsgroups And The Subversion Of Rationality, Patrick Claus May 1997

Eunoia On The Internet?: Usenet Newsgroups And The Subversion Of Rationality, Patrick Claus

OSSA Conference Archive

Using Edward Damer's discussion of effective argumentation principles and Douglas Walton's discussion of argumentation dialogues, I consider arguments from several Usenet newsgroups, the largest collection of Internet discussion groups. In unmoderated newsgroups, participants can engage in open discussions and debates. However, with no central authority, the argumentation in many Usenet groups often degenerates into anarchy. Presenting examples where participants ignore standards of rational conduct and subvert attempts at goal-directed argumentation, I raise questions about the rhetorical nature of an unstructured discourse community. I also consider what the examples reveal about spontaneous argumentation and electronic communication.


Commentary On Clauss, Jim Gough May 1997

Commentary On Clauss, Jim Gough

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No abstract provided.


The Argument Against Rhetoric, Daniel Cohen May 1997

The Argument Against Rhetoric, Daniel Cohen

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The rhetoric of logic reveals, we claim, that arguments are about force, ending only when one side submits. Rhetoricians, it is countered, are content to persuade, settling for agreement when truth is wanted—and all is fair in pursuit of consent. The choice between conceptual rape and seduction is a false choice. It is time to cut against the grain. We are distracted by the rhetoric of logic and gloss the logic of rhetoric. Rhetorical models for pluralistic discourses are vital, but fail as regulative ideals. The ideology of logic's rhetoric is unacceptable, but it is not immutable—so there may be …


Commentary On Cohen, Michael Leff May 1997

Commentary On Cohen, Michael Leff

OSSA Conference Archive

No abstract provided.


Facework And Rhetorical Strategies In Intercultural Argumentation, Inga Dolinina, Vittorina Cecchetto May 1997

Facework And Rhetorical Strategies In Intercultural Argumentation, Inga Dolinina, Vittorina Cecchetto

OSSA Conference Archive

Intercultural discourse (especially via a lingua franca) adds a new dimension—facework (establishing of culture-sensitive politeness strategies)—to the theory and practice of argumentation from a number of perspectives: its specificity as compared to ordinary argumentational discourse, the interpretation of the concept of incommensurability, and the conduct of international negotiations. Politeness systems relevant for different cultures are not unpredictable, but represent linguistically and cognitively a highly generalised universal system which can be adopted by interlocutors and used in practical discourse. Politeness expressions are governed by linguistic components—by language forms of a certain type and by specific discourse patterns. The proper choice of …


Legal And Philosophical Fictions: At The Line Where The Two Become One, Michael G. Dzialo May 1997

Legal And Philosophical Fictions: At The Line Where The Two Become One, Michael G. Dzialo

OSSA Conference Archive

Anti-foundationalism is a central topic in recent legal scholarship. The critical legal studies movement (CLS) has mounted a strong challenge to the traditional belief that legal materials (constitutions, statutes, and precedents) determine legal outcomes and constrain judicial decisionmaking. This scholarship has overlooked, however, the degree to which the debate between traditional legal determinacy and anti-foundational indeterminacy is yet another manifestation of a continuous debate in Western thought—one that has its roots in pre-Socratic rhetoric and philosophy. My presentation traces the indeterminacy thesis back to the contest of ideas between Protagoras and Plato. I examine two well-known and related Protagorean notions: …


Commntary On Dzialo, Christopher W. Tindale May 1997

Commntary On Dzialo, Christopher W. Tindale

OSSA Conference Archive

No abstract provided.


Pathological Circularity: Deductive Validity And A Contextual Account Of The Fallacy Of Begging The Question, James G. Edwards May 1997

Pathological Circularity: Deductive Validity And A Contextual Account Of The Fallacy Of Begging The Question, James G. Edwards

OSSA Conference Archive

The purpose of this study is to provide an account of the fallaciousness of begging the question without thereby indicting as fallacious all otherwise acceptable deductively valid reasoning. The solution that we suggest exploits the intuition that all good arguments are weakly circular. The fallaciousness of begging the question is not that the reasoning is circular simpliciter. Rather, begging the question is a fallacy because the conclusion relies on an undischarged assumption that the audience cannot accept without further argumentation. In the face of such an argument the arguer might just as well have merely asserted the conclusion.


Commentary On Edwards, Lawrence H. Powers May 1997

Commentary On Edwards, Lawrence H. Powers

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No abstract provided.


Commentary On El Komos, Claude Gratton May 1997

Commentary On El Komos, Claude Gratton

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No abstract provided.


Commentary On Feteris, Leo Groarke May 1997

Commentary On Feteris, Leo Groarke

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No abstract provided.


Is Reasoning Gendered?, Linda Fisher May 1997

Is Reasoning Gendered?, Linda Fisher

OSSA Conference Archive

The relevance of feminism for argumentation has been the subject of lively debates recently. I explore the viability of applying feminist categories to argumentation with a focus on the relevance of gender in reasoning and rationality. Arguing from the view that particular practices of reasoning are gendered, as operating within a gendered socio-political context, I examine the implications of conditioned reasoning for a conception of reason. Are reasoning and rationality in some fundamental sense conditioned, e.g., gendered? I argue for a conceptualization of reason as a structural complex whose character can be conditioned yet is non-relativistic.


Commentary On Fisher, Jacqueline Macgregor Davies May 1997

Commentary On Fisher, Jacqueline Macgregor Davies

OSSA Conference Archive

No abstract provided.


Housing Rhetoric: Argumentation And City Planning, David Flemming May 1997

Housing Rhetoric: Argumentation And City Planning, David Flemming

OSSA Conference Archive

When architects, designers, and planners map out the physical space of our urban and regional geography, they also map out the discursive space of our everyday lives. This paper is an exploration of the rhetorical norms implicit in contemporary urban design. I examine three theories of the "good city": Jane Jacobs' The Death and Life of Great American Cities (1961), Christopher Alexander's A Pattern Language: Towns, Buildings, Construction (1977), and Peter Katz's The New Urbanism: Toward an Architecture of Community (1994). I close by proposing a set of civic problems shared by designers and rhetoricians.