ENG Chp 16
Fact
A statement that can be proved.
A strong claim (thesis or key point) has one of the following traits: It's responsible meaning
It takes an ethically sound position (16-3 p184)
A strong claim (thesis or key point) has one of the following traits: It's understandable-meaning
It uses clear terms and defines key words (16-3 p184)
A strong claim (thesis or key point) has the following traits: list all five 16-3 p184:
It's (It is) clearly arguable It's defendable It's responsible It's understandable It's interesting
claims of policy
... state that something ought to or ought not to be done (16-3b p185)
A strong claim (thesis or key point) has one of the following traits: It's defendable meaning:
It can be supported with sufficient arguments and evidence (16-3 p184)
A strong claim (thesis or key point) has one of the following traits: It's clearly arguable meaning:
It can be vigorously debated (16-3 p184)
A strong claim (thesis or key point) has one of the following traits: It's interesting-meaning
It is challenging and worth discussing, not bland and easily accepted. (16-3 p184)
Claims of truth (focus on action)
State that something is or is not the case (16- 3b p185)
An argument centers around a claim-which should be:
a debatable statement that should be arguable, defend-able, reasonable, understandable, and interesting (16-3a p184)
opinion
a personally held taste or attitude (16-3a p185)
argument
a series of statements arranged in a logical sequence supported with sound evidence, and expressed powerfully so as to sway your reader or listener (16-1 p183)
What is a qualifier?
a word or phrase that make claims more reasonable
What are some examples of qualified words:
almost, maybe, some, frequently, likely, many, often, might, probably, tends to, typically, usually
An ________ is a reason or chain of reasons used to support a claim or thesis
argument (16-2 p183)
Avoiding all or nothing, extreme claims mean:
avoid using words that are overly positive or negative-such as: ALL, BEST, NEVER, & WORST 16-3b p185)
An argument centers on a ______ a debatable statement. That _____ is the thesis, or key point you wish to explain and defend so well that readers agree with it.
claim (16-3 p184)
A __________ is a conclusion drawn from logical thought and reliable evidence. (16-3)
claim (thesis)
Make a truly meaningful claim. Avoid claims that are:
obvious, trivial, or unsupportable (16-3b)
Statistics
offer concrete numbers about a topic.
claims of value (focus on action)
state that something does or does not have worth (16-3b p184)