Session 5 Flashcards

(16 cards)

1
Q

Rhetoric

A

any attempt to persuade by non-rational means

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2
Q

Ad Hominem Fallacy

A

Explaining positive or negative feelings about the source of a claim

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3
Q

Ad Populum Fallacy

A

Appeals to what’s popular or normal

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4
Q

Dialectic

A

Methodology for arguing constructively with one another

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5
Q

Public discourse

A

Debating with people with different beliefs and values is necessary for a healthy society

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6
Q

Polarisation

A

‘culture war’, be a part of the solution

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7
Q

Integrity and resilience

A

Care about the truth and face the vulnerability of real discussion.

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8
Q

Intellectual Humility

A

Current state of knowledge is mediocre, accept that others know better

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9
Q

Four golden rules

A
  1. Respond to the argument
  2. Track the burden of proof
  3. Demand overall consistency
  4. Be Charitable
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10
Q

Respond to the argument

A

Recognise claimant’s conclusion + directly engage with the premises or reasoning

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11
Q

Track the burden of proof

A

Be aware of whose responsibility it is to prove what

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12
Q

Demand overall consistency

A

Package of beliefs, values, commitments and arguments add up to a coherent, contradiction-free whole

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13
Q

Be Charitable

A

attribute opponent in the most plausible view and strongest argument consistent with their premises and conclusion

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14
Q

Begging the question

A

Claimant assumes conclusion → eg: if the person doesn’t already believe the conclusion, they won’t believe the premises

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15
Q

Demanding Unreasonable Justification

A

Respondent demands evidence for every premise the claimant offers, in excess of what’s contextually appropriate

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16
Q

False dichotomy

A

Claimant asserts that there are only two options when there is (at least) a third, possibly more plausible option.