Three Recalcitrant Problems of Argument Identification

Authors

  • Michael E. Malone

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22329/il.v23i3.2173

Keywords:

argument diagrams, convergent premises, counterexample, implicit premises, independent premises, linked premises, logic, informal logic, substantive deduction

Abstract

Logicians disagree on (1) criteria for the presence of an argument, (2) criteria for adding implicit premises and (3) criteria for linking premises. I attempt to resolve all three problems, and in the process to remove the main obstacles to teaching diagramming. The first problem is resolved by working with real discourse that students find on their own, rather than the artificial examples and problems found in logic texts; it is further reduced by examining the different uses of argument and understanding the extent to which the basic rules of diagramming are the same for the various uses. The other disagreements persist because logicians neglect to clarify the principal type of eakness we remedy by adding implicit premises and linking premises: in real discourse we do so to block substantive counterexamples, an idea correlated with that of substantive deduction, discussed by Govier, Wright and others.

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Published

2003-01-01

Issue

Section

Articles