105 research outputs found
How to identify an argument type? On the hermeneutics of persuasive discourse
This paper proposes a theory of interpreting argument types as an integral part of a systematic and comprehensive âhermeneutics of persuasive discourseâ. It first explains how such a hermeneutics can be developed based on pragmatic insights about the use of language for persuasive purposes expressed in the philosophy of argument. Then, after having provided an overview of the main hermeneutical stages involved in interpreting persuasive discourse, the paper focuses on the stage of argument type identification. It formulates a âhermeneutics of argument typeâ in terms of the Periodic Table of Arguments (PTA), an argument categorization framework systematizing existing accounts of arguments in the broad sense of the term (topoi, loci, argument schemes, fallacies, means of persuasion). For each of the three parameters within this framework, âargument formâ, âargument substanceâ, and âargument leverâ, the paper describes how to determine their value by analyzing several examples of natural arguments.</p
The assessment of argumentation from expert opinion
In this contribution, I will develop a comprehensive tool for the reconstruction and evaluation of argumentation from expert opinion. This is done by analyzing and then combining two dialectical accounts of this type of argumentation. Waltonâs account of the âappeal to expert opinionâ provides a number of useful, but fairly unsystematic suggestions for critical questions pertaining to argumentation from expert opinion. The pragma-dialectical account of âargumentation from authorityâ offers a clear and systematic, but fairly general framework for the reconstruction and evaluation of this type of argumentation. The tool is developed by incorporating Waltonâs critical questions into a pragma-dialectical framework
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