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Published byConrad Campbell Modified over 9 years ago
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Arguments How to Build Them Alfred Snider, World Debate Institute
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Components Assertion – The name of the argument Thesis – Describe the argument briefly Reasoning – Explain the logic behind the argument Evidence – Show things in reality that support the argument Significance – Explain why this argument is important Result – Explain what this means for the decision in this debate
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ASSERTION A complete thought What the argument is, briefly Rhetorically Snappy This becomes the “name” or “label” in the debate. Just like in a paragraph
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THESIS Explain the argument in one or two sentences Bring the audience on board with the idea When they understand the whole, they assemble the parts more effectively
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REASONING Use the logical connections: causation, category Explain relationships between parts of the argument Explain “why” things happen The “why” can be thought of as the warrant
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EVIDENCE Explain how the abstract argument operates in reality Example Statistics Narrative Visualization Common idea Famous quotation
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SIGNFICANCE Explain why this argument is important, who cares? Number Each one is important Time frame Probability Reversibility Voluntary or involuntary Morally required
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RESULT What does this mean for the decision? How does this compare with what else is being said? Why is this more important than other ideas?
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SO WHAT? IF YOU AIM AT NOTHING YOU WILL SURELY HIT IT MAKE ARGUMENTS TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE WAY PEOPLE LISTEN MAKE COMPLETE ARGUMENTS, JUDGES WILL NOT DO YOUR WORK
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