MODR 1760 Lecture Notes - Lecture 1: Rhetorical Question

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A set of reasons for why you should do or believe something. Premises: claims which provide reason for doing or believing something. Conclusion: what you are supposed to do or believe. Descriptive conclusion asserts that something is, was or will be the case. Normative conclusion makes assertion about what we should or should not do or the standards of behavior we should or should not hold. A sentence which is true or false, premises and conclusions are always claims. Questions and commands are usually not claimsbut a rhetorical question is a claim. Therefore, so, hence, thus, because, for, since, it follows that, given that, the reasons are. Not all arguments have indicator words, and some non-arguments have indicator words. It can be very difficult to distinguish arguments from explanations. Arguments: provide us with a reason to think that something is the case. Explanation: provides us with the reason why or how something is or happened.

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