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Questions tagged [argumentation]

The construction, deconstruction and presentation of arguments for a position;

2 votes
1 answer
71 views

Examples of situations where explaining the situation destabilizes the mind [closed]

Could someone please provide, using logic, or some other reasoning or portrayal, an example of a situation where explaining the situation destabilizes the mind? Thank you.
Joselin Jocklingson's user avatar
1 vote
3 answers
79 views

Argument analysis question

A simple question for those familiar with argument analysis / formalization. Can you elaborate and explain what is going on in the following two arguments? They appear to lead to opposing conclusions ...
butterfliesfloat530's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
129 views

What is the justification of a complex dilemma?

7.8 The Dilemma in Copi's Introduction to Logic says: Complex dilemma: An argument consisting of (a) a disjunction, (b) two conditional premises linked by a conjunction, and (c) a conclusion that ...
Tim's user avatar
  • 507
1 vote
0 answers
58 views

How should an argument containing an exceptive proposition be tested?

IX. Exceptive Propositions in 7.3 Translating Categorical Propositions into Standard Form in Copi's Introduction to Logic says: Because exceptive propositions are not categorical propositions but ...
Tim's user avatar
  • 507
3 votes
1 answer
92 views

Word-Pairing Rhetorical Tactic

I am looking for a name referring to a rhetoric/propaganda tactic in which words are paired together to change perceptions? For example, if I said, "a controversial speaker is giving a lecture at ...
Jason Esposito's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
92 views

For what kind of P is "if P were the case, I would know that P" true?

Consider arguments of the following form for some proposition P: If P were the case, I would know that P. But I don't know that P. Therefore, it is not the case that P. I am wondering what kind of ...
Jimmy Yang's user avatar
3 votes
2 answers
161 views

Model of an argument

I have the thought that an informal argument is fundamentally about building a justification graph: a directed acyclic graph from premise propositions to intermediate and conclusion propositions, ...
causative's user avatar
  • 14.6k
4 votes
5 answers
2k views

Is the Law of Excluded Middle an allowed argument in court?

Is the Law of Excluded Middle a valid deduction rule in court? If not, is it reasonable to say that all arguments in court must be "constructive in nature"? As an example, consider this ...
CatProgrammer's user avatar
1 vote
3 answers
167 views

Why is Occam’s razor faulted for being a heuristic when almost everything in philosophy is?

I am confused as to why any sort of discussion about Occam’s Razor, without fail, has the addendum mentioning how the tool doesn’t prove anything. But quite literally, unless something is logically ...
user avatar
2 votes
2 answers
97 views

Is the argument by analogy logically consistent?

https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/other-minds/#ArguAnal I'm a bit confused by the criticism here. That is, this argument has no problems with logical sequence and if the premises are correct, then ...
Arti's user avatar
  • 157
1 vote
6 answers
214 views

What is the fallacy called where "Nothing a liar said can be true?"

What is the fallacy called where "Nothing a liar said can be true" (i.e., "false in most things, false in everything")? For example, consider that 99% of something someone said is ...
Cody Kentucky's user avatar
2 votes
3 answers
103 views

Type of false reasoning?

I don't have extensive background in philosophy but I try to outline my question clearly. I am arguing with a person who always uses the same logic. We have an outcome X such a medical disease ...
arkiaamu's user avatar
  • 121
0 votes
0 answers
64 views

Is this argument about computers and consciousness logically valid?

Assume 1) You can make a conscious agent consisting of a robot controlled by some computer; 2) There are no zombies 3) You replace the computer by a chinese-like room version that behaves identically. ...
Pato Galmarini's user avatar
4 votes
2 answers
84 views

If moral statements aren't supposed to be reports of objective facts, does the practice of "fallacy checking" apply to moral arguments?

Maybe this is just a case of Jörgensen’s dilemma, but so I was reading the SEP article about feminist perspectives on argumentation, more specifically this passage: The difficulty some philosophers ...
Kristian Berry's user avatar
4 votes
3 answers
929 views

How did Nietzsche prove his will to power?

Was Nietzsche right about the will to power? Specifically, did he (or any of his interpreters) prove (let's take Kant's system as a cut off for 'proof') that the will to power, either individually or ...
user avatar

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