This article addresses the relationship between understanding and believing from the cognitive perspective of information-processing. I promote, within the scope of the Critical Discourse Analysis agenda, the relevance of an account of belief-fixation sustained by a combination of argumentative and cognitive insights. To this end, I first argue that discursive strategies fulfilling legitimization purposes, such as evidentials (see Hart, this issue), tap into the same cognitive mechanisms as (both sound and fallacious) arguments. I then proceed to examine the idea that the most effective arguments are the ones that manage to obscure or make irrelevant counter-evidence and propose, from a cognitive pragmatic perspective, a formulation of rhet...
There exists certain circularity between the formation of some epistemic atti- tudes of an agent an...
In this text I discuss the cognitive and non-cognitive factors that determine the effectiveness of p...
Outline listing argumentation and credibility appeals in persuasion. I. Cognitive Response Model, II...
This article addresses the relationship between understanding and believing from the cognitive persp...
Background Research has shown substantial belief change as a result of reading text and the pervasi...
Constructing quality argumentation to justify one’s own beliefs on a topic is important both for a t...
Constructing quality argumentation to justify one’s own beliefs on a topic is important both for a t...
This dissertation consists in a defence of the claim that belief is a state on which its bearer can ...
This paper addresses the possibility of a cognitive account of argumentation, by focusing on a tenta...
The article analyzes the approaches of scholars to defining the concept of critical thinking, and re...
This paper advances a cognitive account of the rhetorical effectiveness of fallacious arguments and ...
The concept of common ground---a set of propositions common to speaker and hearer that is presuppose...
This Article takes the first step in thinking about where good advocacy should draw the line between...
While we acknowledge the inadequacy of the standard treatment of fallacies (see Hamblin 1970, p. 12)...
While we acknowledge the inadequacy of the standard treatment of fallacies (see Hamblin 1970, p. 12)...
There exists certain circularity between the formation of some epistemic atti- tudes of an agent an...
In this text I discuss the cognitive and non-cognitive factors that determine the effectiveness of p...
Outline listing argumentation and credibility appeals in persuasion. I. Cognitive Response Model, II...
This article addresses the relationship between understanding and believing from the cognitive persp...
Background Research has shown substantial belief change as a result of reading text and the pervasi...
Constructing quality argumentation to justify one’s own beliefs on a topic is important both for a t...
Constructing quality argumentation to justify one’s own beliefs on a topic is important both for a t...
This dissertation consists in a defence of the claim that belief is a state on which its bearer can ...
This paper addresses the possibility of a cognitive account of argumentation, by focusing on a tenta...
The article analyzes the approaches of scholars to defining the concept of critical thinking, and re...
This paper advances a cognitive account of the rhetorical effectiveness of fallacious arguments and ...
The concept of common ground---a set of propositions common to speaker and hearer that is presuppose...
This Article takes the first step in thinking about where good advocacy should draw the line between...
While we acknowledge the inadequacy of the standard treatment of fallacies (see Hamblin 1970, p. 12)...
While we acknowledge the inadequacy of the standard treatment of fallacies (see Hamblin 1970, p. 12)...
There exists certain circularity between the formation of some epistemic atti- tudes of an agent an...
In this text I discuss the cognitive and non-cognitive factors that determine the effectiveness of p...
Outline listing argumentation and credibility appeals in persuasion. I. Cognitive Response Model, II...