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33 - The Skills of Argument

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Deanna Kuhn
Affiliation:
Columbia University
Jonathan E. Adler
Affiliation:
Brooklyn College, City University of New York
Lance J. Rips
Affiliation:
Northwestern University, Illinois
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Summary

Introduction

Scope of the Investigation

The investigation to be described focuses on an individual's thinking processes, and as such it relates most directly to the sizable psychological literature on thinking and reasoning. Yet the work also addresses issues that are prominent in a number of other disciplines.

From a philosophical perspective, the present work relates to an increasing interest shown by philosophers in the nature and logic of natural language argumentation (Walton, 1989). As already mentioned, philosophers of education such as Scheffler (1965) have noted the importance of reflective thinking about thought, but their ideas have not been connected explicitly to the analysis of argumentation. Here we offer those with philosophical interests an analysis of elementary argumentive reasoning that is grounded in empirical data about the competencies and incompetencies that people exhibit in their argumentive reasoning about everyday topics.

From a language perspective, the present work relates to a growing area of research within discourse analysis pertaining to discourse that is argumentive (Grimshaw, 1990). What are the unique features that characterize argumentive in contrast to other kinds of discourse? Although it does not investigate social discourse directly, the research presented here, focused on the cognitive prerequisites of competent argument, offers some insight regarding the language of argument.

From sociological and political perspectives, the present work is relevant to a growing understanding of the complex interrelations that exist between individual and sociological processes (Dowd, 1990).

Type
Chapter
Information
Reasoning
Studies of Human Inference and its Foundations
, pp. 678 - 693
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2008

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References

Allen, G. (1989). Introduction. Special-topic section: Children's political socialization and cognition. Human Development, 32, 1–4.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dowd, J. (1990). Ever since Durkheim: The socialization of human development. Human Development, 33, 138–59.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Galotti, K. (1989). Approaches to studying formal and everyday reasoning. Psychological Bulletin, 105, 331–51.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grimshaw, A. (Ed.) (1990). Conflict talk: Sociolinguistic investigations of arguments in conversations. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Scheffler, I. (1965). Conditions of knowledge: An introduction to epistemology and education. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Walton, D. (1989). Informal logic: A handbook for critical argumentation. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar

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