One result of successful argumentation – able arguers presenting cogent arguments to competent audiences – is a transfer of credibility from premises to conclusions. From a purely logical perspective, neither dubious premises nor fallacious inference should lower the credibility of the target conclusion. Nevertheless, some arguments do backfire this way. Dialectical and rhetorical considerations come into play. Three inter-related conclusions emerge from a catalogue of hapless arguers and backfiring arguments. First, there are advantages to paying attention to arguers and their contexts, rather than focusing narrowly on their arguments, in order to understand what can go wrong in argumentation. Traditional fallacy identification, with its e...
While we acknowledge the inadequacy of the standard treatment of fallacies (see Hamblin 1970, p. 12)...
Abstract: Reasoning is generally seen as a means to improve knowledge and make better decisions. How...
Alongside science and law, argumentation is also of central importance in everyday life. But what ch...
People argue to reconcile differences of opinion, but reconciliation may fail to happen. In these ca...
In theory, flawed arguments are not individually sufficient to justify a conclusion, but several may...
Shouldn\u27t we be convinced by good (valid) arguments and not by bad ones? But there are valid argu...
The rhetorical theory of argument, if held as the conclusion of an argument, is self-defeating. Ther...
This paper argues that recent theoretical attempts to understand fallacious reasoning fail because t...
Grennan's discussion opens with an analysis of how the credibility of the arguer can be reliabl...
People argue to reconcile differences of opinion, but reconciliation may fail to happen. In these ca...
Argumentation occurs through and as communicative activity. Communication (and therefore argumentati...
While we acknowledge the inadequacy of the standard treatment of fallacies (see Hamblin 1970, p. 12)...
Some believe that all arguments make an implicit “inference claim” that the conclusion is inferable ...
In the paper I want to give a new account of notions of reasoning, argumentation, and persuasion. Th...
If we think of fallacies as violations of the preconditions governing the products, processes, and p...
While we acknowledge the inadequacy of the standard treatment of fallacies (see Hamblin 1970, p. 12)...
Abstract: Reasoning is generally seen as a means to improve knowledge and make better decisions. How...
Alongside science and law, argumentation is also of central importance in everyday life. But what ch...
People argue to reconcile differences of opinion, but reconciliation may fail to happen. In these ca...
In theory, flawed arguments are not individually sufficient to justify a conclusion, but several may...
Shouldn\u27t we be convinced by good (valid) arguments and not by bad ones? But there are valid argu...
The rhetorical theory of argument, if held as the conclusion of an argument, is self-defeating. Ther...
This paper argues that recent theoretical attempts to understand fallacious reasoning fail because t...
Grennan's discussion opens with an analysis of how the credibility of the arguer can be reliabl...
People argue to reconcile differences of opinion, but reconciliation may fail to happen. In these ca...
Argumentation occurs through and as communicative activity. Communication (and therefore argumentati...
While we acknowledge the inadequacy of the standard treatment of fallacies (see Hamblin 1970, p. 12)...
Some believe that all arguments make an implicit “inference claim” that the conclusion is inferable ...
In the paper I want to give a new account of notions of reasoning, argumentation, and persuasion. Th...
If we think of fallacies as violations of the preconditions governing the products, processes, and p...
While we acknowledge the inadequacy of the standard treatment of fallacies (see Hamblin 1970, p. 12)...
Abstract: Reasoning is generally seen as a means to improve knowledge and make better decisions. How...
Alongside science and law, argumentation is also of central importance in everyday life. But what ch...