"Argument response" Essays and Research Papers

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    has been attacked and showed some possible response to its defenders which imply his positive attitude towards utilitarianism [1] . In order to argue that thesis‚ Pojman’s one important premise is the response to the no-rest objection. He believed that the agent should aim at maximizing his or her own happiness as well as other people’s happiness and is best not to worry much about the need of those not in our primary circle.[1] . I agree with the argument that Pojman shows. Someone who objects to

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    syllabus

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    COMM 1270-001 1/7 COMM 1270: Analysis of Argument Department of Communication University of Utah * Spring 2014 Instructors Dr. Michael Middleton Office: LNCO 2525 Office Hours: T 2pm-3pm and by appointment m.middleton@utah.edu Jason Jordan‚ Lab Leader Office: LNCO 2930A Office Hours: Wed.‚ 12pm – 1:30pm Email: rangerdebate@gmail.com Class Meetings Lectures Section 1 Labs Section 2 Section 3 Section 4 Section 5 Jeremy Weaver‚ Lab Leader Office: LNCO 2810 Office Hours:

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    surfaced regarding the legal voting ages in Australia as to whether the voting age should be lowered to the age of 16. In response to this issue‚ Melissa Young‚ a 17-year-old girl‚ contends that the voting age should be lowered to 16 in her post on the website‚ youngpeopleunite.com. She conveys her message in an easy-going‚ colloquial manner but simultaneously presents her argument logically and systematically in her endeavour to appeal to teenage users of the website‚ most likely to be also part of

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    1- When I wrote the summary I considered the audience to be in high school because I tried to use the words that I don’t regularly use. 2- There is a lot of points that I learned about summarizing throughout this essay‚ for example‚ I didn’t know that I had to write about the author of the article in the introduction. Secondly‚ I didn’t know about the thesis statement and what should be included within it. 3- The 574 verbs really helped me make my essay a bit less blunt‚ and way less repetitiveness

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    #KEL691. Answer the questions below based on only information presented in the case and your understanding of the case. You may answer the questions in either essay or bullet points form. Be concise and substantiate your answers with logical arguments and flow of thoughts. Question 1 What is the customer acquisition cost for Maru Batting Center (MBC) for the following customers? a) A Little Leaguer b) A Summer Slugger c) An Elite Ballplayer if MBC places the ad in the local baseball enthusiasts

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    Types of Fallacies

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    Once a person becomes familiar with them‚ they can identify logical fallacies in others’ arguments. A person can also avoid using logical fallacies or use them to their advantage to convince others of something differentiates the facts from the fallacies‚ this could help people make a better and more productive decision To define what a fallacy is one must understand what an argument is. An argument consists of one or more premises and one conclusion. A premise is a statement (a sentence

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    9-17-13 Two forms of argument 1) Deductive= provides logically conclusive spport for the conclusion Valid-if the premises are true then the conclusion cannot be false Invalid- it fail to provide support Sound-the argument is valid and the premises are all true Unsound- an argument with true premises that lead to a false conclusion 2) Inductive-provides probable support for the conclusion Strong-premises are true conclusion is probably true cogent-premises are true argument is strong Weak-in

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    Argumentation

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    Writing Assistant http://powa.org/thesis/stating.html (Accessed 03.2006) (Accessed 03.2006) 17.Rienecker L 18.Toulmin S. (1958). Uses of Argument. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 19.Toulmin S.‚ Rieke R.‚ and A. Janik. (1979) An Introduction to Reasoning 20. Turabian K. L. (1996) A Manual for Writers of Term Papers‚ Theses‚ and Dissertations 21. Writing Arguments: A Rhetoric with Readings‚ 5thEdition‚ 2001 Logic in Argumentative Writing http://webster.commnet.edu/grammar/composition/logic.htm (Accessed

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    How Do I Write a Thesis Statement?  What is a thesis statement?  A thesis statement is a very specific argument that guides your paper. Generally‚ a thesis statement consists of two parts:    1. a clearly identifiable topic or subject matter‚ and    2. a succinct summary of what you have to say about that topic    A thesis functions like the case a lawyer has to make to the judge and jury in a courtroom. An effective thesis statement  explains to your reader the case you are going to make and how you are going to make it

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    Fallacious Exercise

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    The exercise provided a great sense of bad arguments and the various fallacies. The quiz gave examples of fallacious appeals such as questionable authority‚ common belief; two wrongs do not equal a right‚ common practice‚ wishful thinking and indirect consequences. Generally speaking the multiple choice answers were tricky as most of the choices were very similar in content and form. The trick to identifying the correct answer is found in previous reading and looking forward. Key words or the

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