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Claims are constantly being made, many of which are confusing, ambiguous, too general to be of value, exaggerated, unfalsifiable, and suggest a dichotomy when no such dichotomy exists. Good critical thinking requires a thorough understanding of the claim before attempting to determine its veracity. Good communication requires the ability to make clear, precise, explicit claims, or “strong” claims. The rules of reason in this book provide the framework for obtaining this understanding and ability.
This book / online course is about the the eleven rules of reason for making and evaluating claims. Each covered in detail in the book.
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Ironically, to conclude that there are no cases when appealing to the Argument from Ignorance is reasonable, would in itself be an argument from ignorance. :) Unless it can be logically deduced from the definition. The main component of this fallacy is claiming support for a hypothesis because of ignorance on a competing hypothesis. For example, because we can't prove that invisible unicorns are not responsible for poking holes in the ozone layer, it would be fallacious to use this as justification for claiming that they are. So if we say that |
answered on Monday, Aug 10, 2015 03:37:55 PM by Bo Bennett, PhD | |
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