Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byMarian Todd Modified over 9 years ago
1
dharris@marjon.ac.uk http://www.arasite.org/
2
Usual Advice # 1 Avoid certain kinds of “argument” Arksey & Harris ( 2007) ch. 5: avoid personal rant, ad hominem, over-generalised argument Bonnett ( 2001) ch.3: avoid circular, reductionist, telelogical argument
3
Usual advice #2 Good arguments are structured in certain ways Arksey & Harris suggest summary plus comment Bonnett – discuss alternative interpretations or views together with supporting or contrary “evidence” Flow-chart approaches: state your views; support with evidence; state contrary views; support with evidence; discuss strengths and weaknesses
4
Theories of Argument Arguments are not just logical but rhetorical, persuasive. Even (sports) science ones. Need full picture to include rhetoric Toulmin: the role of claims, data, warrants (a way of authorising claims from data), qualifiers, rebuttals (aimed specifically at the warrant), and backing. Varies by context?
5
Toulmin -- see Lunsford (2002) D So, Q,C Since W unless R On account of B D= data; Q= qualifier; C=claim; W=warrant; R= rebuttal; B=backing
6
Universal Argument? Habermas and the “ideal speech act” (see Ray 2004) Challenging validity in 4 main ways: Is the claim true, does it describe an actual state of affairs as accurately as possible? Is the claim effective, well-formed, logical, plausible and comprehensible? Is the claim appropriate according to what is normally expected and required? Is the claim a genuine expression of the claimant's views -- is it sincere?
7
References Arksey, H. and Harris, D. (2007) How to Succeed in Your Social Science Degree, London: Sage Bonnett, A. (2001) How to Argue: a student’s guide, London: Pearson Education Ltd Bourdieu, P., Passeron, J-C., and de Saint Martin, M. (1994) Academic Discourse, Oxford: Polity Press Harris, D. (no date) ‘Study Skills’ [online] http://www.arasite.org/studyskills/sskillsmenu.html http://www.arasite.org/studyskills/sskillsmenu.html Latour, B. (1987) Science in Action, Cambridge: Harvard University Press Lunsford, K. (2002) ‘Contextualising Toulmin‘s Model in the Writing Classroom. A Case Study’, Written Communication 19(1): 109—74 Ray, L. (2004) ‘Pragmatism and Critical Theory’, European Journal of Social Theory 7(3): 307--21
8
The Academic Context? “Strategic communication” in academic life – motives other than pure argument? Academic work really about conforming not creativity? – Bourdieu et al (1994). Nice practical advice to end: Get the hang by reading academic work (or critical studies of it) Research and decode your local criteria and power structures
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.