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2979656
The Three Approaches to Argument
Description
Defining all approaches to present an argument.
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argument model
classical
toulmin
rogerian
Mind Map by
saurience
, updated more than 1 year ago
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Created by
saurience
over 9 years ago
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Resource summary
The Three Approaches to Argument
The Classical Approach to Argument
Introduction
Capturing the attention of your audience.
Convince your audience to agree with your point.
State Your Case
Provide background and key facts.
Define the importance of your case.
Explain things in an understanding matter.
Proposition
State you proposition.
Talk about certain topics.
Set up argument in appropriate order. Having the audience comprehend what you are proposing.
Proof
Discuss your reason of proposition.
Point out the positives and negative of facts you have provided.
Provide evidence followed upon the facts.
Refutation
Proposing view points
Expands on why your argument or proposal is the one your audience would agree with.
Propose how it could benefit your audience.
This is, This will, This must.
Conclusion
Choose a few of most important points and summarize them.
Appeal to the audiences feeling, coming from different point of views.
Remind audience how they may benefit from your opposing facts and knowledge.
The Toulmin Approach to Argument
Claim
State the main point of argument.
Define your position and why your point matters.
Grounds
Provide background knowledge.
Provide reasons that benefit your claim.
Use support for evidence.
Warrant
Provide reasons that back up other reasoning.
Casual, authority, analogy, etc.
Connect the data with the claim.
Explain why research goes along with what your claiming.
Backing
Reasons and Info that back up what you have proposed.
Supporting your warrant.
Justifying your reasons for the claim.
Qualification
Using key words like Always, Never, or Absolutely.
Using these words to qualify your warrant and backing.
Minimize words that allow argument to pose bigger picture.
The Rogerian Approach to Argument
Introduction
Discuss an issue and why it's at stake.
What can be solved or answered.
Find and discuss common ground.
Summarize Opposing Views
Verify that you understand other people's view points and beliefs.
Verify that you agree on most if not all levels of beliefs.
Create that ground level using a couple different approaches to understanding the argument on both sides.
Statement of Understanding
Talk about what positions have what in common.
Beliefs and knowledge that certain people share.
Explain reasons for your choosing.
Analysis
Putting together that common ground.
What can you and your opponet agree on?
Demonstrate how your position applies and how it can positively affect someone.
Proposal.
Offer a compromise.
Provide information enlisted from both sides.
Settle somewhere in the middle.
Resolve issue bringing in conclusions from both sides.
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