|  I.    
			  What is 
			argument/argumentation? 
				A.    Argument1 
				= a proposition/claim (with reasons). "What's your argument?B.    Argument2 = process, "We're 
				having an argument"
 
					
					Clues to what is an 
					argument include words such as: "so," "because," "therefore."
					Argumentation is not a 
					communication "breakdown."
					Traditional view of 
					argument1:  
					rational appeals, logic
					Social view of argument1&2:  reason 
					giving / mutual meaning creation / dispute situations  II.    
			If argumentation is 
			"giving reasons" for assertions (micro-structure), What 
			requires reasons?  Do 
			the examples below normally require reasons? 
				
					
						
						 "I love you."  
						(an emotional expression)
						
						
						  "Please 
						take your seats (bus driver)."  (a command)
						
						
						  "I'm 
						giving you a C- on this assignment (an argument if
						there 
						is a dispute but not if it is information giving)
						  "You should pay 
						the cost of repairs to my car." (probably an argument 
						requiring reasons why you should pay)
						  "It's 85 degrees 
						in this classroom." (a simple statement of fact)    
			(We use what "everyone" (involved) has agreed upon as 
			support (grounds) to 
			move to a new claim, thus  creating "chains of reasoning."   
 
			 
			III.  Foundation Concepts in Argumentation 
			A.    
			Definitions.  
			"An 
			argument1 is a (set of) statement(s) in which 
			a claim is made, support (REASONS) is offered, 
			and there is an attempt to influence someone in the context of 
			disagreement."  p. 6  -- "A claim is an expressed conclusion 
			(assertion) the arguer (rhetor) wants accepted." p. 7  [ T.A. 
			Hollihan & K.T. Baaske. Arguments and Arguing.  Waveland 
			1998. ] 
			B.    
			 What counts as a reason? 
			[support?  i.e., evidence, grounds]  
				
					
					sufficiency (to the 
					audience)
					clarity  (to the 
					audience)
					credibility to the 
					audience
					accepted 
					principles/criteria  (for the audience or within "the 
					field")
					silence of the 
					audience/opponent?? (No!)        
			C.    
			  What is not an 
			argument? 
				
					
					descriptions
					undisputed facts
					commands
					emotional (consumatory) 
					expressions
					artistic expressions
					promises 
			What is not an argument in one context 
			may be in another!! 
			Evaluation of argument and rigor vary by 
			situation too.       
			D.    
			What are the goals of argument? 
				
					
					Truth Testing function 
					-- the Dialectic 
						
						Validating claims  
						-- the logical perspective
						Testing claims and 
						ideas (error checking) -- the 
						epistemic perspective(& revealing hidden assumptions)
 
					Advocacy Function - the
					Rhetoric 
						
						Convincing others 
						of a claim (truth and action) 
						Requiring multiples 
						views be considered
						Building common 
						ground
						Strengthening the 
						challenged position [ Tension between 1 
						& 2 is always a problem ] IV.  CONTEXTS for 
			Argumentation 
				A. Cultural Contexts - 
				 
					Shared systems of meanings: symbols, 
					myths, rituals, history, ideology. Sets interpretations, norms, values B. Fields:   
						All academic enterprise is 
						argumentation. Thus, disciplines are argumentation 
						"fields" So are the professions (law, 
						politics, science, etc.) Fields are defined by the traits 
						of 
						
							having consistent patterns of 
							arguments preferred (field specific) 
							warrants |