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Chapter 5

        Analysis is a crucial element in the process of preparation of presenting arguments. Chapter 5 introduces analysis as a mechanism to develop a proposition, identify critical issues, comprehend relevance of issues, and survey claims to gain adherence from decision makers to sort out “an infinite number of related arguments because by one chain of reasoning or another all potential arguments can be related” (Rieke, Sillars, & Peterson, 72). The authors of the textbook claim that regardless of your intentions in the scope of an argument, it is vital to analyze the argument systematically before presenting it to decision makers. The text introduces two interconnected components of analysis: creation and critical analysis of a proposition. While the two often intertwine, I find that components of the text’s description of the critical analysis of a proposition are most helpful in understanding arguments more coherently, especially the section where the authors describe what they find to be the critical values applied to arguments.
The text states, “Because different demands will be placed on your case as you move from one context or sphere to another, it makes sense to pay attention to the way each set of decision makers approaches the decision task” (Rieke, Sillars, & Peterson, 79),. The text makes a decent point here. Arguments adapt all of the time depending on who is making them, who the decision makers are, and what claims are being made. Identifying generic values is essential in being able to analyze the circumstances surrounding an argument. The authors give five values to help: clarity, significance, relevance, inherency, and consistency. Once these five values are understood an applied to a proposition, the proposition can be fine-tuned to maximize the initial adherence of decision makers.

Comments

  1. I like you bringing up the point of context in the second paragraph; I often think this is the toughest part of argumentation for me and one that I continue to work on developing. In other classes, we look at someone's personal context as all of their experiences that have led up to this moment, how that has changed their perspectives, and also how they communicate their perspective. Being able to understand the position someone is coming from without placing characteristics on them is one of the most vital parts of argumentation, and reflects being able to do things like asking relevant, consistent questions. I think your analysis of how context effects argumentation is very succinct and applicable.

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  2. I find your post here to be very interesting and informative. I especially think what you bring up about context in the second paragraph rings true. When looking at an argument context is vitally important to understanding that argument and what the position is of the person making it. Context can make one argument mean something very different depending on who is making it, when they are making it, why they are making it etc. I think about all the times I’ve seen someone make an argument dependent on context and know that without the correct context I could have completely mist=understood the argument and thus the person making it. When listening to or analyzing an argument it is important to remember to analyze the context as well as the verbiage because it can alter the meaning just as much.

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