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Phil 148Chapter 3
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What makes an argument good?• It is often taken to be the case that an argument is good if it is
persuasive, that is, if people are inclined to accept it. • People accept all kinds of foolish things, so persuasiveness is
not the standard of quality for which we are looking.• In fact, Western philosophy was born when some people drew
a distinction between philosophy and sophistry.
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What makes a good argument:• Validity• Means that IF the
premises are true, then the conclusion has to be• In other words, an
argument is valid if it is truth-preserving, meaning that it never takes us from truths to a falsehood.
• Soundness• Means the argument
is valid AND• Means that the
premises ARE true
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Example:• Bill and Hillary Clinton have the same last name• People with the same last name are siblings• :. Bill and Hillary Clinton are siblings
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Example:• Bill and Hillary Clinton have the same last name• People with the same last name are siblings• :. Bill and Hillary Clinton are siblings
(VALID) If both premises were true, then the conclusion would have to be true as well.
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Example:• Bill and Hillary Clinton have the same last name• People with the same last name are siblings• :. Bill and Hillary Clinton are siblings
(UNSOUND) The second premise is false.
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Example:• Whoever wrote the Bible is a great author• Charles Dickens wrote the Bible• :. Charles Dickens is a great author
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Example:• Whoever wrote the Bible is a great author• Charles Dickens wrote the Bible• :. Charles Dickens is a great author
(VALID) If the premises were true, then the conclusion would have to be.
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Example:• Whoever wrote the Bible is a great author• Charles Dickens wrote the Bible• :. Charles Dickens is a great author
(UNSOUND) At least premise 2 is false.
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Example:• Smoking is unhealthful• That which is unhealthful should be illegal• Smoking should be illegal
Here is a valid argument but the premises could stand some justification. Here you would expect separate arguments to be set forth.
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That which is unhealthful should be illegal• For this premise, we would expect an argument
in political philosophy like:• Governments should protect citizens• Laws against that which is unhealthful protect citizens• Governments should outlaw that which is unhealthful.
But of course this arguments premises as well should be justified. At some point one might reach statements that are widely acceptable on their own.
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Smoking is unhealthful
• This statement is justified by a whole different set of arguments. • Does everyone who smokes get lung cancer? Heart
disease? Emphysema?• No, so the broad claim of smoking’s unhealthfulness
requires some statistical generalization.
• Can (or should) a strictly controlled experiment be run here?• Again, no, so the research itself has had to be more
imprecise in order to make the claims that we generally take to be true of smoking.
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Beyond Soundness
• Where do we stop giving reasons?• The answer to this question has had profound
impact on the history of philosophy. Our textbook authors express a characteristically 20th century analytic (anti-foundationalist) view.
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Shortening Argument• There are three practical strategies for shortening our
argument chains.• Each of these strategies has legitimate uses and illegitimate
uses.
• 3 strategies for shortening argument:• 1. Assuring • 2. Guarding• 3. Discounting
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Assuring (1)• Assuring is a strategy for asking someone to accept a premise
on evidence that is not explicitly stated.• Sometimes this is done by citing authorities• Sometimes this is done by making our own confidence in the
claim explicit.
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Assuring (2)• Abusive assurances don’t do either of the previous two things,
but instead just abuse the potential opponent of a claim.• We can give assurances that something is true or that
something is false.• Assurances can be legitimately used for brevity, or to avoid
going on tangents. However, assuring terms often indicate weakness in an argument.
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Guarding (1)• A guarding term is sometimes known as a ‘weaseler’. It makes
a claim weaker, but more likely to be true.• Used legitimately, a guarding term keeps us from asserting or
proving more than we have to. Used illegitimately, guarding terms make our statements insignificant or even vacuous (empty of meaning).
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Guarding (2)• 1. Weakening the extent of what is said• 2. Using probability terms• 3. Diminishing our level of commitment
• Be sure that guarding terms don’t creep in over the course of an argument.
• Be sure that guarding terms don’t disappear in the course of an argument.
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Discounting (1)• Discounting is a way of anticipating some objection by
stressing that one fact is more important than the other.• Discounting can also be used to block a conversational
implication.
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Discounting (2)
• “That ring is beautiful, but expensive”• Asserts two facts:
• “That ring is beautiful”• “That ring is expensive”
• Implies that the second fact is more important than the first. (Is a reason not to buy the ring)
• “That ring is expensive, but beautiful”• Asserts two facts:
• “That ring is expensive”• “That ring is beautiful”
• Implies that the second fact is more important than the first. (Is a reason to buy the ring)
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Evaluative Language• Evaluative statements serve a variety of crucially important
purposes, and are versatile in their application.• The same evaluative term (e.g. ‘good’) can be applied to all
kinds of things, but it will operate differently depending on the standards that we apply.
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Standards• When people have a conflict of opinion on whether
something is good, it is usually because they imply different standards (in other places called ‘criteria’)• Becoming clear on what standards underlie each use of
an evaluative term is the single most important and most overlooked part of value debate.• Consider: what makes a good…• Baseball player?• Automobile?• Person?• Cat?
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Positive and Negative Evaluation
• Sometimes whether evaluation is positive or negative is contained in the meaning of the term (e.g. wasteful, deceitful, beautiful, honest).• Sometimes extra words make an ordinarily
neutral evaluative term into a positive or negative one (too_____, not _____ enough).• Sometimes whether evaluation is positive or
negative is buried in context:• A: “Do you think Calvin would be good at basketball?”• B: “He’s tall”
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Eupehemism/Dysphemism (1)• A Euphemism is a word or phrase intended to make
something bad sound neutral or good.• A Dysphemism is a word or phrase intended to make
something good or neutral sound bad.
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Euphemism/Dysphemism (2)
• The name of every piece of legislation passed at any level of government is a euphemism.• Euphemisms often replace euphemisms (e.g.
toilet, shell-shock)• Sometimes euphemisms are used out of
politeness or sensitivity (e.g. euphemisms for death, PC language) • Euphemisms sometimes lose their euphemism-
hood (e.g. lesbian)
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Lesbian…
• The Island• The Poet
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Spin Doctoring
• When Euphemism/Dysphemism is used as a form of attempted mind-control (effective so often it’s shameful to our species) we call it spin doctoring• As an exercise, try to spot euphemistic language
in political debate, and change all the euphemisms to the most neutral language you can. This is a decent way to evaluate some political debate and disagreement.
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When euphemisms go bad…
• Slogans: often used to mislead and avoid real issues; remember, a slogan is NOT a position or an argument, though it may hint at a loose grouping of positions and arguments. Most slogan pairs are not even meaningful, much less mutually exclusive.• Pro-Choice vs. Pro-Life• Progressive Education vs. Back to Fundamentals• Liberal vs. Conservative• Alternative Lifestyle vs. Family Values