Fr. 159.00

Adequate Connections - Assessing Argument Ground Adequacy

English · Hardback

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Description

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This book presents a comprehensive picture of when the premises of an argument are adequately connected to its conclusion. The author draws upon the familiar Toulmin model, Rescher's discussion of presumption and burden of proof, and L. Jonathan Cohen's presentation of the method of relevant variables.
The book first assesses the warrant or inference rule connecting the premises to the conclusion. To analyzes this, the author asks a series of questions such as - should the warrant be evaluated by conclusive or defeasible standards? Does the argument require that its premises, if acceptable, guarantee that the conclusion is acceptable also or does it allow the premises just to present a body of relevant evidence? Is the inference rule backed or supported a priori or a posteriori? These distinctions form four categories of warrants: conclusive a priori, defeasible a posteriori, defeasible a priori, and virtually conclusive a posteriori. The warrants in each category are evaluated differently for how strongly the premises support the conclusion of arguments instancing those warrants. After presenting the rationale for this division and discussing our nonprobabilistic approach, the author analyzes the connection adequacy for each of these types of warrants. This book is of interest to scholars of argumentation theory.

List of contents

Connection Adequacy and the Concept of Warrant.- Identifying the Warrant of an Argument.- What Types of Warrants Are There?.- Conclusive A Priori Warrants.- Defeasible Warrants and Probability.- Defeasible A Posteriori Warrants I: Empirical Warrants.- Defeasible A Posteriori Warrants II: Personal Warrants.- Defeasible A Posteriori Warrants III: Institutional Warrants.- Defeasible A Priori Warrants.- Virtually Conclusive A Posteriori Warrants.- Determining Whether a Particular Connection is Adequate.

About the author

James Freeman received his B.A. degree from Drew University and his Ph.D. from Indiana University, He taught logic and argumentation theory at Hunter College for 40 years. His publications include Thinking Logically, Dialectics and the Macrostructure of Arguments, Acceptable Premises, and Argument Structure: Representation and Theory together with many papers in informal logic and argumentation theory.

Product details

Authors James B Freeman, James B. Freeman
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 01.01.2025
 
EAN 9783031764769
ISBN 978-3-0-3176476-9
No. of pages 179
Dimensions 155 mm x 14 mm x 235 mm
Weight 409 g
Illustrations XIII, 179 p. 12 illus.
Series Argumentation Library
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Philosophy > General, dictionaries
Non-fiction book > Philosophy, religion > Philosophy: general, reference works

Philosophical Logic, Warrant Backed a Priori, Conclusive argumentation, Inference Rule, Warrant Backed a Posteriori, Argument Evaluation, Warrant argumentation, Premise/conclusion Connection, Defeasible argumentation, Connection Strength

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