The Language Of Composition Chapter 3

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62 Terms

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argument

a persuasive discourse, a coherent and considered movement from a claim to a conclusion

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Rogerian arguments

arguments based on the assumption that having a full understanding of an opposing position is essential to responding to it persuasively and refuting it in a way that is accommodating rather than alienating

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claim

states the argument's main idea or position

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has to be arguable

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to develop it into a thesis statement, you have to be more specific about what you intend to argue

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claim of fact

they assert that something is true or false

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claim of value

they argue that something is, for example, good, bad, right, wrong, etc.

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claim of policy

anytime you propose a change, you make a _______________

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closed thesis

a statement of the main idea of the argument that also previews the major points the writer intends to make

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open thesis

a statement of the main idea of the argument that does not list all of the points the writer intends to make

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counterargument thesis

when a writer's statement of the main idea of his argument is preceded by a summary of a counterargument

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relevant evidence

evidence that specifically applies to the argument being made

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accurate evidence

evidence that is taken from a reliable source and not misquoted

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logical fallacy

potential vulnerabilities in an argument

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red herring

when a speaker skips to a new and irrelevant topic in order to avoid the topic of discussion

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faulty analogy

when two things that are not comparable are compared

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hasty generalization

when there is not enough evidence to support a particular conclusion

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Example: "Smoking isn't bad for you; my great aunt smoked a pack a day and lived to be 90."

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circular reasoning

fallacy that involves repeating the claim as a way to provide evidence, resulting in no evidence given at all

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Example: "You can't give me a C, I'm an A student!"

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first-hand evidence

something you know, whether it's from personal experience, anecdotes you've heard from others, observations, or your general knowledge of events

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second-hand evidence

evidence that is accessed through research, reading, and investigation

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Examples: factual and historical info, expert opinion, quantitative data

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appeal to false authority

when someone who has no expertise to speak on an issue is cited as an authority

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quantitative evidence

evidence that can be represented as numbers

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the classical oration

five-part argument

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consists of an intro, narration, confirmation, refutation, and conclusion

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introduction

introduces the reader to the subject under discussion

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narration

provides factual info and background material on the subject at hand or establishes why the subject is a problem that needs addressing

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also refers to telling a story or recounting a series of events that supports your thesis

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confirmation

the major part of the text, includes the development of the proof needed to make the writer's case

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refutation

addresses the counterargument and is the bridge between the writer's proof and conclusion

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conclusion

brings the essay to a satisfying close

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induction

arranging an argument so that it leads from particular to universals

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deduction

when you reach a conclusion by starting with a general principle or universal truth and applying it to a minor premise

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syllogism

a logical structure that uses the major premise and minor premise to reach a necessary conclusion

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Toulmin model

an approach to argument that is useful in uncovering the assumptions that underlie arguments

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contains six elements: claim, support (evidence), warrant (the assumption), backing, qualifier, and reservation

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warrant

expresses the assumption necessarily shared by the speaker and the audience

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backing

further assurances or data without which the assumption lacks authority

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qualifier

tempers the claim, making it less absolute

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reservation

explains the terms and conditions necessitated by the qualifier

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rebuttal

gives voice to possible objections

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begging the question

a fallacy in which a claim is based on evidence or support that is in doubt

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description

emphasizes the senses by painting a picture of how something looks, sounds, smells, tastes, or feels

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often used to establish a mood or atmosphere

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makes it easy for the reader to empathize with the speaker, their subject, or their argument

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process analysis

explains how something works, how to do something, or how something was done

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when using this format, it's important to explain a subject clearly and logically, with transitions that mark the sequence of major steps, stages, or phases of the process

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exemplification

providing a series of examples - facts, specific cases, or instances - turns a general idea into a concrete one

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examples are a type of logical proof called induction

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comparison and contrast

juxtaposing two things to highlight their differences and similarities

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classification and division

answers the question, "What goes together and why?" in order to make connections between things that might otherwise seem unrelated

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most of the time, a writer's task is to develop his or her own categories, to find a distinctive way of breaking down a larger idea or concept into parts

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definition

used to clarify the meaning of terms

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often the first step in a debate or disagreement

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cause and effect

identifying why something happens and what happens in result of it

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ad hominem

this fallacy refers to the specific diversionary tactic of switching the argument from the issue at hand to the character of the other speaker

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ad populum

this fallacy occurs when evidence boils down to "everybody's doing it, so it must be a good thing to do"

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either/or

a fallacy in which the speaker presents two extreme options as the only possible choices

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post hoc ergo propter hoc

this fallacy occurs when one claims that something is a cause just because it happened earlier

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straw man

a fallacy that occurs when a speaker chooses a deliberately poor or oversimplified example in order to ridicule and refute an idea