interpertating the resolution/types of criteria
random questions
Methods of Preparation
tests of evidence
O’Neill, Laycock, and Scales (1917)
100

Affirmative has the right to define

  • Gets to specify what the resolution means

  1. State the controversy 

  • The first speaker must read the full text of the resolution

  • Must be read verbatim

  • Must be done within the first minute of the first speech


  1. Define the controversy 

  • Articulate a clear and compelling vision of what it means to say yes to the resolution.

  • Establish your vision of the good and true.


  1. Preserve the controversy 

  • Must offer a case that is debatable and fair


100

define 

Definitions are governed by logical principles

  • 1st Principle: stating the class, or group, to which the object of definition belongs. 

Ex. Humanism is a “philosophy of general development”

  • 2nd Principle: showing how your subject for definition differs from the other members of its group. 

Ex. What is an argument? An art that convinces and persuades a reader or listener

Principles of Definition

100

 relies upon reading words from a page or screen 

  • Most ordered and controlled method of preparation available

Manuscript:

100

When is evidence not needed?

  • When evidence is “self-evident”

  • When a claim is common knowledge

  • When it is stipulated by both sides of the controversy


100

destruction of opposing proofs

  • Supplementary to positive proof

Refutation:

200

3 ways the affirmative can FAIL to preserve the controversy

truism

tautology

abuse

200

define For a definition in a debate round, we usually need a meaning more specific and nuanced than what you will find in a general-purpose dictionary. Fashion your own definitions

Specific Means of Definition

200

involves holding the entire text of a speech (word-for-word) in a speaker’s mind.

  • Less reliable 


Memorization”

200

three linguistic treats to clear meaning:

ambiguity, vagueness, and interdeterminacy

200

3 errors in the management of controversy

  • Answering too much 

  • Answering too little

  • Answering yourself, not your opponent 

300
  • Grounding truth conditions of the win/loss in big picture terms

  • Show when the resolution should be affirmed 

Rational grounds for holding the resolution to be true

300

how many definitions by are there and can you name them all

7

Definition by Authority 

Definition by Etymology 

Definition by History 

Definition by Illustration 

Definition by Contrast of Comparison

Definition by Negation 

Definition by Enumeration

300

a prepared speech in which most of the words spoken are selected in the moment of utterance


Extemporaneous: the one clark wants us to use


300

how can we tell Is it True?

  • Accurately

  • Clearly 

  • Completely 

  • With a complete citation


Is the source 

  • Recent 

  • Biased

  • Competent

  • Reliable 


Is the Content 

  • Relevant 

  • Internally consistent 

  • Externally consistent

  • strong

300

Three Fundamental Requirements of Refutations for Positive Argument

Position of Refutation 

Arrangement of Refutation

Special refutation

General Refutation

400

Concerned with establishing the truth-value of the resolution 

  • Criteria of What (issues) 

  • Criteria of How (formal)

  • Criteria of How Much (Frequency and Proportion)

  • Criteria of How Certain (Probability)

Epistemic vs Non-Epistemic Criteria

400

What are Issues?

Issues: essential questions that must be answered “yes” by the Affirmative to establish the resolution.

400

generated in the moment of presentation

Impromptu:

400

Relationship of the debater to the evidence

Accuracy: Is the debater accurately reporting the evidence to the audience 


Clarity: evidence should be presented clearly 


Completeness: not only should a presenter accurately report what was said, but that statement should be representative of what was presented in the source


Citation: Where is the content being presented from?

  • Who said it? (the author)

  • Where was it said? (the platform that published the information)

  • When was it said? (the publication date)

400

showing that the evidence presented by an opponent is unsound in some way, fails to meet the proper tests of such evidence, or is an effective refutation


Attack on the forms of argument: demonstrating the weakness of any argument… is also an excellent method of refutation 

Tests of Evidence:

500

Concerned with beauty and moral claims that stand outside the resolution

  • Delivery, style, organization

  • Decorum

  • Wit 

  • Kritik


Non-Epistemic Criteria

500

what are the Stock Issues for Policy Propositions

•HARM / ILL

•INHERENCY / BLAME

•SOLVENCY / CURE

•PRACTICABILITY

• COST-BENEFIT

500
  • Pieces of evidence and individual arguments that are prepared in advance of the debate

Cards: Notes

500

Source questions involve consideration of both the speaker and the platform.

Recency: It is common in academic debate that the side that has the most recent evidence wins a content claim


Bias: source is relatively disinterested in the dispute and not likely to be led by prejudice for or against one side?

  • Reluctant testimony: works in favor of the credibility of a source (whistleblowers)


Competence: Is the source qualified to speak on this issue?


Reliability: If a source regularly makes extreme and bizarre claims, they may be regarded as unreliable even if they hold legitimate credentials


Relevance: Does the evidence support the claim?


Internal Consistency: Is the evidence consistent with itself?


External consistency: Does what the source alleges fit with accounts offered by other sources?

Strength: Evidence supports claims strongly and weakly 

500

when we expose a fallacy in another’s argument, we are using a very common and very effective method of refuting them

Fallacies:

M
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