A Guide for Forming Arguments
This is relatively simple but it is key in (especially) philosophical arguments.
The basic outline to an argument goes as follows:
PREMISE #1
PREMISE #2
CONCLUSION
In order for your conclusion to be reasonable (I'm not using this word loosely), both premises must be correct. If a premise is correct, then its logic is infallible.
To invalidate a conclusion, one must challenge either premise, or one must challenge the structure of the argument.
For example, consider a faulty structured argument that is obvious to challenge:
White is RGB 255, 255, 255.
BOATS ARE COOL
Black is not white
Premise 2 contributes to the faultiness of the argument. One could certainly challenge whether BOATS ARE COOL or not, but it would be irrelevant in this case as it does not lead up to the conclusion. Instead, one challenges premise 2 as a faulty element of the structure of the argument.
Hope this helps/makes sense.
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Last edited by James, May 9th, 2005 12:39 AM (Edited 1 times)
