The chapter of evidence is important for us
to understand because the role of evidence plays one of the most important
parts in all kinds of arguments. A powerful evidence is helpful for adding the
credibility of the argument as well as letting the decision maker give more
solid adherence to a claim. On the contrary, if one fails to demonstrate a
strong enough evidence, the credibility would on the decline, and sometimes the
argument would be totally damaged. The authors explain the term evidence as the
support for a claim that the arguer discovers from experience or outside
authority (pg. 103). A successful argument demonstrates the careful use of
three forms of evidence including example, statistics, and testimony.
Considering
the general goal of an argument is to persuade the decision maker, it is hard
to correctly prescribe how evidence should be used to back up the argument
since its believability is influenced by the decision maker and their
experience (pg. 109). But there are still some reasonable standards for
developing more forceful evidence: examples should be sufficient and representative
with valuable characteristics and details; the source of statistics should be
current, reliable, carefully considered, and made clearer through comparison;
the testimony should be based on credibility measures; negative instances
should also be mentioned, and the evidence should include experience which the
decision maker relates to. This guide for the use of evidence reminds me of my
paper from the last semester’s writing class. My argument in the paper is that
after the Communist Party implemented the notorious one-child policy for two
decades, the new two-child policy is not a solution for gender imbalance,
population aging and labor force shrinking in China. In order to develop a
strong support for my argument, I cited eight recent sources including
sufficient data, a clear comparison on the new generation’s changing idea about
having kids and several personal stories from citizens with both positive and
negative propositions, and I used reliable sources from authorities such as The
Economist, The Wall Street Journal, and other peer-reviewed academic research
articles. I think it is extremely important to talk about negative instances
because the acknowledgment of them could strengthen an argument and makes the
arguer seem more trustworthy. In my case, I covered this by citing some
research from scholars who insist that the two-child policy could ease
population aging in China. Furthermore, the use of decision makers’ experience
could help supporting one’s argument. In my paper, I reminded some decision
makers by mentioning that Chinese citizens have a historical reason for
rebelliously against the new policy after the brutal implementing of the old
one-child policy. However, it could only relate to Chinese people rather than
the others. So it is difficult to successfully reflect all the decision makers’
experience, and it always depends on the specific sphere in which the
argumentation occurs.
Rieke, R.
D., Sillars, M. O., & Peterson, T. R. (2013). Argumentation and
critical decision making. Boston: Pearson.
Hello Yujia
ReplyDeleteI really enjoy reading your post and your solid and insight point about this chapter. About your example of evidences can be difficult to choose when it comes to different decision makers, I feel the same way about Emma Watson's feminism speech as a female goodwill ambassador in UN, but my angle is Emma Watson herself as a rhetor of a persuasive speech. Emma Watson is a high class, highly educated, beautiful, young, white woman. In Emma’s speech, she stated that “My life is a sheer privilege because my parents didn’t love me less because I was born a daughter. My school did not limit me because I was a girl. My mentors didn’t assume I would go less far because I might give birth to a child one day. These influences were the gender equality ambassadors that made me who I am today. They may not know it, but they are the inadvertent feminists who are changing the world today. And we need more of those” Is it possible that only the affirmative action of those who embrace privilege will be taken seriously, considered and accepted? Is Emma Watson's demand fits all women's need?
http://www.unwomen.org/en/news/stories/2014/9/emma-watson-gender-equality-is-your-issue-too