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| Preface | p. ix |
| What Is an Argument? (And What Is Not?) | p. 1 |
| Argument and Opinion | p. 1 |
| What Is an Argument? | p. 3 |
| Where and How Do You Find Arguments? | p. 7 |
| Why Are Arguments Important? | p. 10 |
| What Isn't an Argument? | p. 12 |
| Argument and Explanation: What's the Difference? | p. 18 |
| Chapter Summary | p. 27 |
| Review of Terms... MORE | p. 27 |
| Notes | p. 28 |
| Pinning Down Argument Structure | p. 29 |
| Standardizing an Argument | p. 29 |
| From Colloquial Writing to Standardized Form | p. 34 |
| General Strategies for Standardizing Arguments | p. 38 |
| Important Details about Conclusions | p. 43 |
| Important Details about Premises | p. 51 |
| The Principle of Charity in Argument Interpretation | p. 60 |
| Chapter Summary | p. 64 |
| Review of Terms Introduced | p. 65 |
| Notes | p. 66 |
| When Is an Argument a Good One? | p. 68 |
| The ARG Conditions | p. 68 |
| More on the (R) and (G) Conditions: Reasoning from Premises to Conclusions | p. 71 |
| Using the ARG Conditions to Evaluate Arguments | p. 75 |
| The Significance of Argument Evaluation | p. 81 |
| The Challenge of Argument | p. 85 |
| Evaluating Arguments and Constructing Your Own Arguments | p. 92 |
| The Dialectical Context | p. 94 |
| Chapter Summary | p. 96 |
| Review of Terms Introduced | p. 97 |
| Notes | p. 99 |
| Looking at Language | p. 100 |
| Definitions | p. 103 |
| Further Features of Language | p. 116 |
| Clarity and Audience: The Problem of Jargon | p. 126 |
| Chapter Summary | p. 133 |
| Review of Terms Introduced | p. 134 |
| Notes | p. 136 |
| Premises: What to Accept and Why | p. 138 |
| The Dilemma of Premises | p. 138 |
| When Premises Are Acceptable | p. 140 |
| Summary of Acceptability Conditions | p. 154 |
| When Premises Are Unacceptable | p. 156 |
| Summary of Unacceptability Conditions | p. 165 |
| Chapter Summary | p. 169 |
| Review of Terms Introduced | p. 170 |
| Notes | p. 172 |
| Working on Relevance | p. 174 |
| Characteristics of Relevance | p. 174 |
| Some Ways of Being Relevant | p. 177 |
| Irrelevance: Some General Comments | p. 181 |
| Fallacies Involving Irrelevance | p. 187 |
| Irrelevance, Missing Premises, and Argument Criticism | p. 203 |
| Emotional Appeals, Irrelevance, and Distraction | p. 208 |
| Chapter Summary | p. 211 |
| Review of Terms Introduced | p. 211 |
| Notes | p. 213 |
| Deductions: Categorical Logic | p. 215 |
| Deductive Relations | p. 215 |
| Four Categorical Forms | p. 218 |
| Natural Language and Categorical Form | p. 220 |
| Venn Diagrams | p. 225 |
| Rules of Immediate Inference | p. 227 |
| Contrary and Contradictory Predicates and False Dichotomies | p. 233 |
| Categorical Logic: Some Philosophical Background | p. 235 |
| The Categorical Syllogism | p. 238 |
| The Rules of the Categorical Syllogism | p. 244 |
| Applying Categorical Logic | p. 246 |
| Chapter Summary | p. 249 |
| Review of Terms Introduced | p. 250 |
| Notes | p. 252 |
| Deductively Valid Arguments: Propositional Logic | p. 253 |
| Definition of the Basic Symbols Used in Propositional Logic | p. 254 |
| Testing for Validity by the Truth Table Technique | p. 259 |
| The Shorter Truth Table Technique | p. 262 |
| Translating from English into Propositional Logic | p. 266 |
| Further Points about Translation | p. 276 |
| Simple Proofs in Propositional Logic | p. 285 |
| Propositional Logic and Cogent Arguments | p. 292 |
| Chapter Summary | p. 294 |
| Review of Terms Introduced | p. 295 |
| Notes | p. 297 |
| An Introduction to Inductive Arguments | p. 298 |
| Philosophical Background | p. 298 |
| Inductive Generalizations | p. 301 |
| Causal Inductive Arguments | p. 313 |
| Correlations | p. 318 |
| Problems with Premises | p. 324 |
| Common Fallacies in Inductive Arguments | p. 334 |
| Different Senses of Inductive | p. 344 |
| Chapter Summary | p. 345 |
| Review of Terms Introduced | p. 346 |
| Notes | p. 348 |
| Analogies: Reasoning from Case to Case | p. 350 |
| The Nature and Functions of Analogy | p. 350 |
| Analogy and Consistency | p. 352 |
| Inductive Analogies | p. 367 |
| Further Critical Strategies | p. 375 |
| Loose and Misleading Analogies | p. 378 |
| Chapter Summary | p. 389 |
| Review of Terms Introduced | p. 389 |
| Notes | p. 390 |
| Conductive Arguments and Counterconsiderations | p. 392 |
| Counterconsiderations | p. 395 |
| Chapter Summary | p. 410 |
| Review of Terms Introduced | p. 410 |
| Notes | p. 411 |
| Reflective Analysis of Longer Works | p. 413 |
| Introduction | p. 413 |
| Reading for Understanding | p. 414 |
| Reading for Appraisal | p. 418 |
| Developing an Outline for Your Essay | p. 420 |
| A Sample Essay | p. 425 |
| Working through an Example | p. 430 |
| Chapter Summary | p. 434 |
| Review of Terms Introduced | p. 435 |
| Note | p. 436 |
| A Summary of Fallacies | p. 437 |
| Selected Essays for Analysis | p. 446 |
| "How Patriarchy Becomes Santa Claus: Why a Myth Is as Good as Its Smile," | p. 446 |
| "Abortion and Violence," | p. 448 |
| "Believing in the Goddess?" | p. 449 |
| "Clash Over Climate Change: Singer Article Clouds the Picture," | p. 453 |
| "Global Warming Proof Still Suspect," | p. 455 |
| Answers to Selected Exercises | p. 458 |
| Index | p. 484 |
| Table of Contents provided by Syndetics. All Rights Reserved. |