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Argument, Inference and Dialectic: Collected Papers on Informal Logic with an Introduction by Hans V. Hansen PDF

168 Pages·2001·7.52 MB·English
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ARGUMENT. INFERENCE AND DIALECTIC Argumentation Library Volume 4 Series Editors: Frans H. van Eemeren, University ofA msterdam t Rob Grootendorst, University ofA msterdam Joseph Wenzel, University ofI llinois John Woods, University of Lethbridge ARGUMENT, INFERENCE AND DIALECTIC COLLECTED PAPERS ON INFORMAL LOGIC WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY HANS V. HANSEN by ROBERT C. PINTO Department of Philosophy, University of Windsor, Windsor, Ontario, Canada SPRINGER-SCIENCE+BUSINESS MEDIA, B.V. A C.I.P. Catalogue record for this book is available from the Library of Congress. ISBN 978-90-481-5713-6 ISBN 978-94-017-0783-1 (eBook) DOI 10.1007/978-94-017-0783-1 Printed an acid-free paper AII Rights Reserved © 2001 Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht Originally published by Kluwer Academic Publishers in 2001 No part ofthe material protected by this copyright notice may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanica1, including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without written permission from the copyright owner. TABLE OF CONTENTS PREFACE vii INTRODUCTION by Hans ViIh. Hansen IX 1. Overview of Chapters 1-12, ix 2. Retrospective: Logic, Dialectic and the Practice of Rational Criticism, xx Chapter 1: DIALECTIC AND THE STRUCTURE OF ARGUMENT 1. Introduction, 1 2. Presumption and Burden of Proof, 2 3. Do there have to be "objective standards" for assessing arguments?, 4 4. Conclusion, 8 Chapter 2: GENERALIZING THE NOTION OF ARGUMENT 10 1 Doxastic attitudes other than belief, 11 2. Propositional attitudes other than doxastic attitudes, 15 3. Nonpropositional objects of conscious attitudes, 17 4. Conclusion: further questions, 19 Chapter 3: LOGIC, EPISTEMOLOGY AND ARGUMENT APPRAISAL 21 1. Introduction, 21 2. Appraising premisses, 23 3. Suitability of inferential link, 26 4 Conclusion, 31 Chapter 4: THE RELATION OF ARGUMENT TO INFERENCE 32 1. Arguments and inferences, 32 2. Inference, 39 3. Logical pragmatics, argumentation theory and the evaluation of inference, 43 Chapter 5: INCONSISTENCY, RATIONALITY AND RELATIVISM 46 1. Why is inconsistency a fault?, 46 2. How serious a fault is inconsistency?, 49 3. When is it reasonable to tolerate inconsistency?, 51 4. What about relativism?, 54 Chapter 6: POST HOC, ERGO PROPTER HOC 56 Chapter 7: LOGIC, COHERENCE AND PSYCHOLOGY 64 v vi TABLE OF CONTENTS Chapter 8: LOGIC, COHERENCE AND PSYCHOLOGY REVISITED 73 1. Introduction, 73 2. Understanding a domain as necessary background of any reasoning, 74 3. Is the understanding ofa domain susceptible of propositional or sentential representation?, 75 4. Understanding, coherence and rationality, 78 Chapter 9: LOGICAL FORM AND THE LINK BETWEEN PREMISSES AND CONCLUSION 81 1. Preliminaries, 81 2. Semantic entailments, 85 3. Inductive inferences and Goodman's paradox, 89 4. The effect of pragmatic considerations on the validity of inductive generalization, 95 5. Conclusion, 96 Chapter 10: ARGUMENT SCHEMES AND THE EV ALUA TION OF PRESUMPTIVE REASONING 98 1. In what sense does presumptive reasoning/argument constitute a sui generis class?, 98 2. Are there normative argument schemes? 100 Chapter 11: PRESUMPTION AND ARGUMENT SCHEMES 105 1. Presumptive reasoning, 105 2. Argument schemes, 108 3. Do argument schemes have normative force?, 109 4. What is the point of identifYing argument schemes?, 111 Chapter 12: COGNITIVE SCIENCE AND THE FUTURE OF RATIONAL CRITICISM 113 1. Cognitive science at the extremes, 113 2. What if the eliminativists are right?, 117 Chapter 13: LOGIC, DIALECTIC AND THE PRACTICE OF RATIONAL CRITICISM 126 I. Introduction, 126 2. The nature of the undertaking to which these papers are devoted, 128 3. Revisiting "Dialectic and the Structure of Argument" - the role of dialectic, 130 4. Revisiting "Dialectic and the Structure of Argument", - relativism 134 5. Conclusion, 140 REFERENCES 141 INDEX 145 PREFACE Chapters 1-12 of this volume contain the papers on infonnal logic and argumentation that I've published and/or read at conferences over the last 17 years. These papers are reproduced here pretty much unchanged from their first appearance; it is my intention that their appearance here constitute a record of my positions and arguments at the time of their original publication or delivery. I've made minor changes in fonnat, in the style of references, etc., for the sake of consistency; I've also corrected typographical errors and the like. The only extensive changes in wording occur in the last few pages of Chapter 7, and were made only to enable the reader to see more clearly what I was getting at in my first attempt to write about the notion of coherence. Chapter 13 was written expressly for this volume. It looks retrospectively at the contents of the first 12 chapters and attempts to highlight the unifying themes that run through them. It also revisits the ideas about dialectic that occupied my first paper, reworking them in light of later developments in my thinking but also re emphasizing themes about which I've tended to remain silent in the last few years. **** This volume would never have seen the light of day were it not for the encouragement and help of my colleague Hans V. Hansen. It was he who proposed the idea of this volume, who persuaded Kluwer and the Argumentation Library to publish it, and who has supplied an Introduction that offers the reader an external perspective of the papers. My debt to him is enonnous. **** The sources for Chapters 1-12 are as follows. Chapter 1 was previously published under the title "Dialectic and the structure of argument" in Informal Logic 6 (1984), pp. 16-20. Copyright 1984 Infonnal Logic. All rights reserved. It is reprinted by pennission. Chapter 2 was previously published under the title "Generalizing the notion of argument," in van Eemeren, Grootendorst, Blair and Willard, eds., Proceedings of the Second International Conference on Argumentation, vol. IA. (Amsterdam: SICSAT, 1991), pp. 137-46. Copyright 1991 SICSAT. All rights reserved. Reprinted by pennission. Chapter 3 was previously published under the title "Logic, epistemology, and argument appraisal," in Johnson and Blair, eds., New Essays in Informal Logic. Windsor: Infonnal Logic, 1994. pp. 116-24. Copyright 1994 Informal Logic. All rights reserved. Reprinted by permission. Chapter 4 was first published under the title "The relation of argument to inference," in van Eemeren, Grootendorst, Blair and Willard, eds., Perspectives and Approaches. Amsterdam. Sic Sat, 1995. pp. 271-86. Copyright 1995 SICSAT. All rights reserved. Reprinted by pennission. Vll Vlll PREFACE Chapter 5 was first published under the title "Inconsistency, rationality and relativism" in Informal Logic 17 (1995), pp. 279-88. Copyright 1995 Informal Logic. All rights reserved. Reprinted by permission. Chapter 6 was first published under the title "Post hoc, ergo propter hoc," in Hansen and Pinto, eds., Fallacies: Classical and Contemporary Readings (University Park: Penn State Press, 1995), pp. 302-11. Copyright 1995 Pennsylvania State University Press. All rights reserved. Reprinted by permission. Chapter 7 was first published under the title "Logic, coherence, and psychology" in Hansen, Tindale and Colman, eds., Argumentation and Rhetoric (compact disc). St. Catharines: OSSA, 1998. Copyright 1998 Robert C. Pinto. All rights reserved. Chapter 8 ("Logic, coherence, and psychology revisited") was read at Ontario Philosophical Society, University of Toronto, November 1997 and is previously unpublished. Chapter 9 is scheduled for publication under the title "Logical form and the link between premiss and conclusion," in Tindale, Hansen and Raposo, eds., Argumentation at the Century's Turn (compact disc): st. Catharines: OSSA. Copyright 2000 Robert C. Pinto. All rights reserved. Chapter 10 was first published under the title "Argument schemes and the evaluation of presumptive reasoning," ProtoSociology 13 (1999), pp. 50-58. Copyright 1999 ProtoSociology. All rights reserved. Reprinted by permission. Chapter II ("Presumption and Argument Schemes") was read at Central States Communication Association Conference, Detroit, April 2000 and is previously unpublished. Chapter 12 ("Cognitive Science and the Future of Rational Criticism") is previously unpublished. Earlier versions were read at the Thirteenth Annual Conference on Critical Thinking, Sonoma State University, August 1993, at the Seminar on Reasoning and Argumentation, organized by the International Conference and Research Center for Computer Science in Schloss Dagstuhl, August 1993, and at the Philosophy Department Colloquium of the University of Waterloo in November 1993. **** I want especially to thank my colleagues Tony Blair and Ralph Johnson for their help, guidance and lively criticisms over many years. Without them, my interest in these topics would probably not have begun and would certainly not have been sustained. Ralph Johnson, in particular, offered criticism of some of the material written expressly for this volume. I am indebted to David Hitchcock for many helpful suggestions and criticisms. I also want to express my appreciation to the editors of the Argumentation Library, especially Frans van Eemeren for his encouragement and John Woods for trenchant criticisms of earlier drafts of some of the papers reprinted here. Finally I want to acknowledge the assistance of Susan Zwartbol-Jones of Kluwer, which was indispensable in seeing this project through to completion. Robert C. Pinto University of Windsor INTRODUCTION by Hans Vi/h. Hansen Many of the prejudices held by the traditional logician are scrutinized in the papers that make up this volume. The status and authority of argument standards, the concepts of 'argument,' of 'inference,' and of 'argument cogency' are all re considered. The seriousness of inconsistency and its relation to reasoning and to relativism is taken up and put in a new light. A traditional fallacy is given an exemplary treatment which forces us to see that it is much more difficult than we had thought to decide whether this fallacy has been committed. The role of logical form in determining argument strength is brought into question, as is the idea of normative argument schemes. And the possible consequences that modem cognitive psychology could have for logic and reasoning are explored. These topics, and others that revolve about them, are the subject of this book. On each of the questions raised, Pinto has something challenging to say to the person who thinks that logic is a finished project and that in its present state it is an adequate instrument for understanding and evaluating argument discourse. I. OVERVIEW OF CHAPTERS 1-12 1.1 Chapter 1: Dialectic and the structure ofa rgument. The first of the essays in this collection, "Dialectic and the structure of argument," dates from 1984. In it, Pinto elaborates on a Socratic claim about the nature of I dialectic: that its aim is to bring just one other person into agreement with one's own views. He draws two important consequences from this conception of dialectic. First, that the only rules to which dialogue is subject are those recognized by both parties, and secondly, that the understanding and evaluation of arguments is dependent on understanding the dialectical interchange in which they occur. In Pinto's view, it is the correlative notions of presumption and burden of proof which give order to dialectical interchanges. He defines these concepts dialectically. A proposition is presumptive just in case, if an opponent refuses to concede it, she has the obligation (or burden of proof) to make a case against it. Within this I It is an interesting coincidence that this essay first appeared the same year in which van Eemeren and Grootendorst published their landmark work, Speech Acts in Argumelltative Discussions. The Canadian and Dutch argumentation scholars did not become familiar with each others work until a few years later. ix x INTRODUCTION framework, a good argument may be taken as one which creates a presumption for its conclusion (and thereby creates a burden on the one who would oppose it). What is needed next are some general rules that tell us when an argument does create a presumption for its conclusion. Pinto refers to such rules as 'presumption policies' and these must be accepted by both parties in the dialogue. However, an important point about presumption policies is that they can themselves become the subject of discussion. Thus, if a dialectical other balks at accepting a presumption policy one has used to establish a conclusion, then perhaps, after further argumentation about the acceptability of the policy, she may be brought to accept it, and the discussion can resume. But the debate about whether to accept a particular presumption policy is still a discussion between the two people involved in the dialectical interchange; moreover, the acceptability of a presumption policy depends on the possibility that it can be discussed, and consequently accepted by the two participants. (If they were to reject the policy after discussing it, it would lose its force.) Thus Pinto seems to be advocating a kind of intersubjective internal ism as the source of dialectical standards: not only must the presumption policies be jointly agreed upon by the participants in the dialogue, there is no external, or outside, source of legitimacy for the policies. Rather than give a proof of this position, Pinto attempts to show us its plausibility by illustrating it with two examples, one a 'usual case' argument, the other an argument for the confirmation of an hypothesis. I will not review these here, but I should indicate to the reader that Pinto has re-thought some of his views on dialectic, and his modifications are found in the final chapter of this collection (Chapter 13). Most significantly, he now recognizes a role for those 'outside' the dialogue on the ground that any dialectic discussion takes place within the context of the intellectual community to which its participants belong. 1.2 Chapter 2: Generalizing the notion ofa rgument. In this essay, Pinto outlines three kinds of argumentation that seem to fit uncomfortably with the standard definition of 'argument' as a set of premisses that are intended to justify the truth or acceptability of a conclusion. Mainstream logicians, as well as some informal logicians, embrace the idea that arguments aim only at inducing belief. Pinto finds this to be too narrow a conception of argument since the point of an argument may only be to incline us to believe its conclusion, or suspect its truth, or consider it possible, rather than to straightforwardly believe it is true. He refers to the attitude of belief and belief-like attitudes as doxastic attitudes. The point being made is then that an argument may aim to induce doxastic attitudes other than straightforward belief toward the proposition at the core of its conclusion. This possibility is not part of the usual presentation of what an argument is or does, and it widens the scope of arguments. Doxastic attitudes are not the only ones one can have towards a proposition. Nondoxastic propositional attitudes include such as things as hoping, wishing, fearing, or anticipating, that something is or will be the case. Thus, an argument

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Chapters 1-12 of this volume contain the papers on infonnal logic and argumentation that I've published and/or read at conferences over the last 17 years. These papers are reproduced here pretty much unchanged from their first appearance; it is my intention that their appearance here constitute a re
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