Speech Ch 15
policy debates
Gov: need-plan-advantage establish a need plan of action advantages Opp:direct refutation, disadvantages, minor repairs, counter plan
parliamentary debate
Gov: prime minister(PM), member of gov(MG) Opposition: leader of opposition(LO), member of opposition (MO)
value debate
Gov: value, criteria, application Opp: argue any of these
three types of reasoning
-deductive -inductive -analogic
mythos
a form of proof grounded in the social feelings that connect us powerfully with group traditions, values, legends and loyalities
logos
a form of proof that appeals to reason based largely on facts and expert testimony presented logically
ethos
a form of proof that relies on the audience's perceptions of a speaker's leadership qualities of competence, character, goodwill and dynamism
deductive reasoning
arguing from a general principle to a specific case In deductive reasoning, if something is true of a class of things in general, it is also true for all members of that class. For example, "All men are mortal. Harold is a man. Therefore, Harold is mortal." For deductive reasoning to be sound, the hypothesis must be correct. It is assumed that the premises, "All men are mortal" and "Harold is a man" are true. Therefore, the conclusion is logical and true.
slippery slope
arguing that one bad thing will result in many others
confusing fact with opinion
asserting opinions as though they were facts, or discrediting facts as opinions
begging the question
assuming as decided what has actually not been proved
post hoc
assuming because one event follows another, it was caused by it
ad hominem
attacking the person not the point
shaky principle
basing an argument on an unsound assumption
straw man
belittling or trivializing arguments to refute them easily
faulty analogy
comparing things that are dissimilar in some important way
omitted qualifiers
confusing probability with certainty by asserting a conclusion without qualifications
analogical reasoning
creating a strategic perspective on a subject by relating it to something similar about which the audience has strong feelings
red herring
distracting listeners with sensational, irrelevant material
hasty generalization
drawing conclusions based on insufficient or non representative observations
fallacies
errors in reasoning that make persuasion unreliable
either-or thinking
framing choices so that listeners think they only have two options
defective testimony
omitting when a statement was made or a speaker's credentials; quoting out of context
syllogism
pattern of deductive reasoning as it develops in reasoned persuasion
reasoning from parallel cases
presenting a similar situation as the basis of an argument. Often called analogical reasoning
pathos
proof relying on appeals to personal feelings
reason from principle
reasoning from shared principles,values, and rules. Sometimes called deductive reasoning
inductive reasoning
reasoning from specific factual instances to reach a general conclusion Harold is a grandfather. Harold is bald. Therefore, all grandfathers are bald." The conclusion does not follow logically from the statements.
non sequitur
reasoning in which principles and observations are unrelated to each other or to the conclusion drawn
minor premise
relating a specific instance to the general principle that supports an argument
Fact debate
standards-ethics examples
major premise
the general principle on which an argument is based
myths of the mean
using an average to hide a problem
inappropriate evidence
using facts when examples are needed, or examples when facts are needed or an intimidating list of authorities as a substitute for information
flawed statistical comparasions
using percentage increases or decreases to distort reality