I argue that conductions are a special type of inference indeed, but that this does not mean that we need to develop novel standards of inference goodness or specific argument schemes for properly assessing them. Following LNMA’s theoretical framework, I provide a semantic account of conductions and explain the interesting pragmatic properties of a certain type of conductions (i.e., balance of considerations or pro-and-con argumentation) in terms of the rhetorical dimension of the speech-act of arguing.Je soutiens que les arguments conducteurs sont un type spécial d’inférence, mais que cela ne signifie pas que nous devons élaborer des nouvelles normes de bonne inférence ou de catégorie d’arguments pour les évaluer correctement. Suivant le c...
The paper aims to provide an analysis and critique of Carl Wellman’s account of conduction presented...
This paper endorses a view of argumentation and arguments that relates both to a special type of spe...
The concept of conductive argument weight was developed by Carl Wellman and later by Trudy Govier. T...
I argue that conductions are a special type of inference indeed, but that this does not mean that we...
I argue that conductions are a special type of inference indeed, but that this does not mean that we...
When Carl Wellman (1971) introduced the reasoning-type conduction, he endorsed a dialectical view on...
Conductive arguments, as a separate category of reasoning, has experienced a revival. In 2010, the ...
Conductive argumentsThe term “conduction” introduced by Wellman in 1971 is almost absent...
I will demonstrate that conductive arguments are found in the inference to the best explana-tion as ...
This commentary presents the view that "conductive argument" is an argumentation structure rather th...
The topic of conductive argument has attracted much attention in recent argumentation studies, but m...
Carl Wellman (1971) introduced the reasoning-type conduction while en-dorsing a dialectical view on ...
This paper endorses a view of argumentation and arguments that relates both to a special type of spe...
This paper is to argue that conductive arguments could be understood from a rhetorical perspective. ...
In “Are conductive arguments possible?” Jonathan Adler argued that conductive argu-ments (those bala...
The paper aims to provide an analysis and critique of Carl Wellman’s account of conduction presented...
This paper endorses a view of argumentation and arguments that relates both to a special type of spe...
The concept of conductive argument weight was developed by Carl Wellman and later by Trudy Govier. T...
I argue that conductions are a special type of inference indeed, but that this does not mean that we...
I argue that conductions are a special type of inference indeed, but that this does not mean that we...
When Carl Wellman (1971) introduced the reasoning-type conduction, he endorsed a dialectical view on...
Conductive arguments, as a separate category of reasoning, has experienced a revival. In 2010, the ...
Conductive argumentsThe term “conduction” introduced by Wellman in 1971 is almost absent...
I will demonstrate that conductive arguments are found in the inference to the best explana-tion as ...
This commentary presents the view that "conductive argument" is an argumentation structure rather th...
The topic of conductive argument has attracted much attention in recent argumentation studies, but m...
Carl Wellman (1971) introduced the reasoning-type conduction while en-dorsing a dialectical view on ...
This paper endorses a view of argumentation and arguments that relates both to a special type of spe...
This paper is to argue that conductive arguments could be understood from a rhetorical perspective. ...
In “Are conductive arguments possible?” Jonathan Adler argued that conductive argu-ments (those bala...
The paper aims to provide an analysis and critique of Carl Wellman’s account of conduction presented...
This paper endorses a view of argumentation and arguments that relates both to a special type of spe...
The concept of conductive argument weight was developed by Carl Wellman and later by Trudy Govier. T...