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Evaluating Arguments PPT

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Mather ● McCarthy
The Art of Critical Reading
Part 4
Reading Critically
Chapter 11
Analyzing and
Evaluating Arguments
1
© 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Mather ● McCarthy
The Art of Critical Reading
The critical reader must be able to evaluate arguments.
When you evaluate an argument (a set of claims),
you determine its value or persuasiveness.
To be able to do a good job evaluating arguments,
you need to know what an argument is
and how an argument is put together.
Part 4: Reading Critically
Chapter 11: Analyzing and Evaluating Arguments
2
© 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Mather ● McCarthy
The Art of Critical Reading
An argument is a claim that is supported by reasons or evidence.
When an author tries to persuade the reader
that something is true or correct
by presenting supporting reasons or evidence,
an argument is being made.
This means that
an argument
is different from
a statement.
Part 4: Reading Critically
Chapter 11: Analyzing and Evaluating Arguments
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© 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Mather ● McCarthy
The Art of Critical Reading
The author is trying to convince the reader that a claim is true
by giving supporting reasons or evidence.
Arguments can be broken down into their parts.
The parts of an argument are
the assumptions,
the premises,
and the conclusion.
Part 4: Reading Critically
Chapter 11: Analyzing and Evaluating Arguments
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© 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Mather ● McCarthy
The Art of Critical Reading
The assumptions of an argument support the conclusion
but they are not stated in the argument.
Assumptions tie the premises to the conclusions.
They are claims that lie in the background of the argument
that make the argument work.
Part 4: Reading Critically
Chapter 11: Analyzing and Evaluating Arguments
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© 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Mather ● McCarthy
The Art of Critical Reading
To find the assumptions behind an argument,
ask yourself what is left unstated in the argument
that must be true for it to work.
The premises of an argument are the reasons or evidence
that the author presents to support the conclusion.
The premises of an argument
are often introduced by words
such as “since” or “because.”
Part 4: Reading Critically
Chapter 11: Analyzing and Evaluating Arguments
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© 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Mather ● McCarthy
The Art of Critical Reading
The conclusion of an argument
is the claim that is the point of the argument.
When an author makes an argument,
it’s the conclusion that the author is trying to persuade
the reader to accept as true.
The premises and assumptions
in an argument are there
to support the conclusion.
Part 4: Reading Critically
Chapter 11: Analyzing and Evaluating Arguments
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© 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Mather ● McCarthy
The Art of Critical Reading
The conclusion of an argument
is often introduced
by words such as
“accordingly,”
“consequently,”
or
“thus.”
Part 4: Reading Critically
Chapter 11: Analyzing and Evaluating Arguments
8
© 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Mather ● McCarthy
The Art of Critical Reading
To evaluate an argument, you need to analyze it.
When you analyze an argument,
you break it down into its parts
and examine them by themselves
and in relation to the other parts of the argument.
Part 4: Reading Critically
Chapter 11: Analyzing and Evaluating Arguments
9
© 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Mather ● McCarthy
The Art of Critical Reading
Steps for analyzing an argument.
First, identify the argument’s conclusion (claim).
What is the conclusion the author is trying to
persuade the reader to accept as true?
What is the point of the argument?
Part 4: Reading Critically
Chapter 11: Analyzing and Evaluating Arguments
10
© 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Mather ● McCarthy
The Art of Critical Reading
Steps for analyzing an argument.
Second, identify the assumptions
that the argument makes.
Third, identify the premises (reasons or evidence)
that the author puts forth in support of the conclusion.
Part 4: Reading Critically
Chapter 11: Analyzing and Evaluating Arguments
11
© 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Mather ● McCarthy
The Art of Critical Reading
Steps for analyzing an argument.
Fourth, think critically and skeptically
about the premises (reasons or evidence)
that the argument presents and the
assumptions that the argument makes.
Are the premises true?
Do the assumptions defeat or weaken the
argument?
Part 4: Reading Critically
Chapter 11: Analyzing and Evaluating Arguments
12
© 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Mather ● McCarthy
The Art of Critical Reading
Steps for analyzing an argument.
Fifth, ask yourself how well the premises
and assumptions support the conclusion.
If the premises are weak or false,
then the argument will be less persuasive
or even invalid.
If the assumptions defeat or weaken the argument,
the argument will be less persuasive or even invalid.
Part 4: Reading Critically
Chapter 11: Analyzing and Evaluating Arguments
13
© 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Mather ● McCarthy
The Art of Critical Reading
Logical fallacies are ways of arguing or reasoning
that may seem to make sense but actually do not.
They often seek to manipulate by appealing to emotion.
The name of each fallacy indicates
the particular error in reasoning that has occurred.
Propaganda often makes use of logical fallacies.
This is why there are similarities between
propaganda devices and logical fallacies.
Part 4: Reading Critically
Chapter 11: Analyzing and Evaluating Arguments
14
© 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Mather ● McCarthy
The Art of Critical Reading
An Introduction to Logical Fallacies
1. Faulty Cause and Effect (post hoc, ergo propter hoc)
The Latin meaning, “after this, therefore because of this,”
suggests that because B follows A, A must cause B.
Just because two events or two sets of data are sequential
does not necessarily mean that one caused the other.
Part 4: Reading Critically
Chapter 11: Analyzing and Evaluating Arguments
15
© 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Mather ● McCarthy
The Art of Critical Reading
2. Non sequitur (“it does not follow”)
A non sequitur occurs when the conclusion of an argument
does not follow from its premises.
3. Begging the Question
This fallacy occurs when you assume as true what you are
trying to prove.
4. Circular Logic
This fallacy occurs when the conclusion restates the
information presented as evidence.
Part 4: Reading Critically
Chapter 11: Analyzing and Evaluating Arguments
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© 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Mather ● McCarthy
The Art of Critical Reading
5. Hasty generalization
In this fallacy, the conclusion is based on a sample that is
too small.
Part 4: Reading Critically
Chapter 11: Analyzing and Evaluating Arguments
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© 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Mather ● McCarthy
The Art of Critical Reading
6. Either/or fallacy (or false dilemma)
This is a fallacy of “black-and-white thinking”:
only two choices are given, and there are no
shades of gray.
People who exhibit this type of thinking have
a “bumper sticker” mentality; they say things
like “America—love it or leave it!”
Part 4: Reading Critically
Chapter 11: Analyzing and Evaluating Arguments
18
© 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Mather ● McCarthy
The Art of Critical Reading
7. False Analogy
In this fallacy, two things that may not really
be similar are portrayed as being similar.
In most false analogies, there is simply not enough
evidence available to support the comparison.
8. Ad hominem argument (argument against the man)
This fallacy involves an attempt to discredit an argument by
attacking the person making it.
Part 4: Reading Critically
Chapter 11: Analyzing and Evaluating Arguments
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© 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Mather ● McCarthy
The Art of Critical Reading
9. Ad populum argument (argument to the people)
This kind of argument seeks to win agreement by
making an appeal to common prejudices, values,
and emotions. It does not rely on facts or reasoning.
A common form of ad populum is an appeal to
patriotism.
At its extreme, ad populum relies on “mob appeal.”
Part 4: Reading Critically
Chapter 11: Analyzing and Evaluating Arguments
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© 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Mather ● McCarthy
The Art of Critical Reading
10. Red herring
This fallacy involves directing attention away from a
debatable point to one that most people will quickly agree
with.
The name of this fallacy comes from the fact that if an
uncooked herring (which has a strong scent) is dragged
across the trail of an animal (or person) that dogs are
tracking, the dogs will abandon the original scent and follow
the scent of the herring.
A red herring argument is meant to distract from the issue at
hand.
Part 4: Reading Critically
Chapter 11: Analyzing and Evaluating Arguments
21
© 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Mather ● McCarthy
The Art of Critical Reading
11. Slippery Slope
This fallacy assumes that taking a first step
down a path will necessarily to later steps.
If we let X happen, the next thing you know
Y will happen.
The image is one of a boulder rolling uncontrollably
down a steep hill. The boulder can’t be stopped until it
reaches the very bottom.
Part 4: Reading Critically
Chapter 11: Analyzing and Evaluating Arguments
22
© 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Mather ● McCarthy
The Art of Critical Reading
Study Technique # 9 Venn Diagram
A Venn diagram is an illustration that shows
similarities and differences between topics.
• Wrote Declaration
of Independence
• From Virginia
Jefferson
Part 4: Reading Critically
Chapter 11: Analyzing and Evaluating Arguments
• Died on
the same day
• Both
denounced
slavery
• Advocated
Declaration of
Independence
• From Massachusetts
Adams
23
© 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Mather ● McCarthy
The Art of Critical Reading
Chapter 11 Test Taking Tip—
Key Words That Often Appear in Essay Questions
Following is a list of key words
that often appear in essay questions.
If you are going to write a good answer
to an essay question that uses one of these terms,
you need to know what the term means.
Part 4: Reading Critically
Chapter 11: Analyzing and Evaluating Arguments
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© 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Mather ● McCarthy
The Art of Critical Reading
Analyze
to break down the subject into parts and discuss each part.
You will want to discuss how the parts relate to each other.
Comment on
to discuss or explain
Compare
to show differences and similarities,
but with the emphasis on similarities
Contrast
to show differences and similarities,
but with the emphasis on differences
Part 4: Reading Critically
Chapter 11: Analyzing and Evaluating Arguments
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© 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Mather ● McCarthy
The Art of Critical Reading
Criticize
The narrow meaning of criticize is to examine something for its
weaknesses, limitations, or failings.
Does the theory, article, or opinion make sense?
If not, why not?
In a more general sense, criticize means
to find both strengths and weaknesses.
In this sense, the meaning of criticize is similar
to the meaning of evaluate.
Define
to state the meaning of a term, theory, or concept.
You will want to place the subject in a category and
explain what makes it different from other subjects
in the category.
Part 4: Reading Critically
Chapter 11: Analyzing and Evaluating Arguments
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© 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Mather ● McCarthy
The Art of Critical Reading
Describe
to explain what something is or how it appears.
You will need to draw a picture with words.
Diagram
to make a chart, drawing, or graph.
You will also want to label the categories or elements, and
maybe provide a brief explanation.
Discuss
to go over something fully.
You will want to cover the main points, give different
perspectives, and discuss strengths and weaknesses.
Part 4: Reading Critically
Chapter 11: Analyzing and Evaluating Arguments
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© 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Mather ● McCarthy
The Art of Critical Reading
Enumerate
to make a list of main ideas by numbering them
Evaluate
to examine for strengths and weaknesses.
You will need to give specific evidence and
may wish to cite authorities to support your position.
Part 4: Reading Critically
Chapter 11: Analyzing and Evaluating Arguments
28
© 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
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