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The Five Parts of Argument: Two Encouraging, Friendly Questions

The document outlines the five parts of an effective argument: 1) Claim - a statement or position that readers do not already accept 2) Reasons - statements that support the claim 3) Evidence - facts, data, or real-world examples that support the reasons 4) Warrant - a general principle that connects the reasons to the claim 5) Acknowledgment and response - addressing any alternative or counter arguments that dispute the claim.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
62 views1 page

The Five Parts of Argument: Two Encouraging, Friendly Questions

The document outlines the five parts of an effective argument: 1) Claim - a statement or position that readers do not already accept 2) Reasons - statements that support the claim 3) Evidence - facts, data, or real-world examples that support the reasons 4) Warrant - a general principle that connects the reasons to the claim 5) Acknowledgment and response - addressing any alternative or counter arguments that dispute the claim.

Uploaded by

John Darwin
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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THE FIVE PA R T S OF ARGUMENT

Two Encouraging, Friendly Questions


Question 1: What do you think?

Every argument is based on some Claima statement that readers do not already
accept and that they will not accept without good reason.

Question 2: Why do you think that?

You cannot expect readers to accept your Claim just because you say so. They look
for you to support it with Reasonsstatements that, taken together, give readers a
basis for accepting your claim.

Two Increasingly Challenging Questions

Question 3: How do you know (your reasons are true)?

Readers may not accept your Reasons unless you support them with Evidence
statements, numbers, photographs, or other representations of states of affairs that
your readers accept without question, at least for the purposes of the argument.

Question 4: Why do you think your Reasons support your Claim?

Readers may not see why your Reasons and Evidence support your Claim. In this
case, you need to supply a Warranta general principle usually drawn from
background knowledge shared by you and your reader that connects your Reasons
to your Claim. Think of the Warrant as the foundation on which your argument
rests. If your reader does not accept your Warrant, s/he will most likely not accept
your Claim or Reasons. Since it is so fundamental, a Warrant is most effective
when it does not need to be statedwhen you can reasonably assume that your
reader will accept your Warrant. Sometimes, however, a Warrant is articulated for
the first time in a paper.

One Final Question From a Skeptic

Question 5: But what about this . . . alternative claim (reason, evidence or warrant) that
does not support the claim in question?

A reader may have counter-claims (and counter-reasons, evidence, or warrants) that


dispute the claim made in your argument. You must acknowledge the readers
skepticism and respond to it. Hopefully your response will be convincing enough
so that it dispels the readers doubts. We call this process Acknowledgment and
Response.

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