| 
Microstructure 
 
A Toulmin Analysis of Arguments 
		by Lee McGaan, 
		Department of Communication Studies, Monmouth College (IL)adapted from Stephen Toulmin. The Uses of Argument, Cambridge: 
		Cambridge Univ. Press, 1958
 
 
      The 
Three Primary Elements of an Argument 
Claim (assertion, proposition)
A statement affirming or denying somethingthe answer to the question "What are you trying to prove?" "What's your point?" - Can be denied (in this context)
 Grounds (Support, evidence)
material which will convince audience/opponentnot likely to be disputed (in this context) OR can be further supported.usually more concrete, often narrower (or a general truth).an answer to the question, "How so?" "Why do you think so?" "Prove it!"It is appropriate for the claim because it is relevant and strong.
 Warrant: what links support/gr. to cl. Why the gr. is allowed to stand as proof for 
the claim 
A principle of logic or reasoninga recipe or licenseoften a formal rulegenerally unstated, an assumption that both rhetor and audience implicitly acceptthe key is that a warrant can apply to many claims and grounds. It's not specific to just this situation.
 
		EXAMPLE: 
			
			Claim:  
Joe Smith is a good choice for the position of Appellate Court Judge 
			Grounds:  
The American Bar Association recommended Smith as well qualified. 
			Warrant:  
(usually unspoken)  The ABA is an authority source known as competent to 
determine who is a good choice for appellate judge positions.   |