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Loading... A Rulebook for Arguments (original 1987; edition 2018)by Anthony Weston (Author)
Work InformationA Rulebook for Arguments by Anthony Weston (1987)
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. If there is a more concise and readable book on argumentation out there, I am unaware of it. I picked up this book to help me develop instructional materials on argumentation for advanced high school students. While it is an excellent resource for my endeavor, I think this book belongs, besides Strunk and White's The Elements of Style, on every college student's bookshelf; I wish I'd had it myself during my undergraduate years. Anthony Weston created an indispensable handbook here. It's small, easy to carry, easy to read, and is incredibly useful as a resource to help one hone his or her skills in analyzing the logic of arguments. I strongly recommend keeping a copy of 'A Rulebook for Arguments' around and handy, it could be more frequently useful than one might imagine. Now, to be clear, Weston doesn't go much into giving a list of fallacies. Rather, he delves into structure of arguments and the ways to scrutinize their logic. It is a book of vital lessons in logic. A Rulebook For Arguments by Anthony Weston is a veritable entry-level book for those seeking information on how to employ critical thinking. The book is quite short, but the value of the information this book provides more than makes up for the size considering the quality of information. For those seeking a practical rulebook on the applications of logic, argumentation, fallacies and more, this book gives an easy to follow but robust approach. Given the breath of the information, page for page, this book is a high-value item, especially considering it also offers a synopsis on some of the more common fallacies employed by people. Some additional of the elements discussed in the book are generalizations, sources, deductive arguments, oral arguments, argumentative essays, arguments by analogy, and more. The other benefit is that this book can be read by people of all ages, and it will aid them immensely. From adults, to young children, this book would fine-tune anyone’s repertoire. To finalize, as a book to keep in hand to quickly reference this book will be crucial given the latitude that it offers individuals willing to apply its rules. Anthony Weston encourages the use of representative examples and counterexamples, warns of the hazards of statistics (like I recently have), imparts the importance of impartial and reliable sources, explains the correlational relationship between cause and effect, presents deductive reasoning in the words of Sherlock Holmes, preaches the value of librarians, and can teach a thing or two to Badly Behaving Authors. Criticisms and suggestions, as always, are welcome. ~ Page x, from the Preface The Some Common Fallacies chapter is excellent. The examples I run into the most: ad hominem On the Big Benefits Row Live, Katie Hopkins (a vile woman) responded to Annabel Giles's well-reasoned argument with a personal insult instead of refuting the argument: "All I hear is somebody that wanted to be a model, but didn't make it." (Er, she was the face of Max Factor, I think she 'made it'.) ad misericordiam One word: X-Factor. The sob stories 'appealing to pity as an argument for special treatment.' ad populum "Everyone's doing it!" Sex (for teenagers). Brazilian waxes. iPhones. '...appealing to a person to go along with the crowd.' As the author invites criticism, I have only one complaint: No forms of cognitive bias were included. Bias is explicitly mentioned once, during the introduction of section IV on Sources. I've tried to find a book that does include them and this was, in the end, the most likely candidate to cover this topic, so I'm a tad disappointed. A Rulebook for Arguments really is what it says, a short and concise, but easy to understand, list of rules on how to construct a solid argument. Recommended to everyone 12 , including authors of both fiction and non-fiction, for everything from a short and simple discussion to essays, oral presentations, and dissertations. no reviews | add a review
From academic writing to personal and public discourse, the need for good arguments and better ways of arguing is greater than ever before. This timely fifth edition of A Rulebook for Arguments sharpens an already-classic text, adding updated examples and a new chapter on public debates that provides rules for the etiquette and ethics of sound public dialogue as well as clear and sound thinking in general. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)168Philosophy & psychology Philosophical logic Argument and persuasionLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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