BASICS
CLASSICAL
ROGERIAN
TOULMIN
FALLACY
100

The main position or argument a writer is trying to prove.

CLAIM

100

The first part of the essay

Exordium

100

The first part of the Rogerian Essay

Introduction

100

The first part of the Toulmin Argument

Claim

100

Saying something is true because many people believe it.

Bandwagon

200

A statement or idea that forms the basis for a conclusion.

Premise

200

The part where you write your thesis

Partitio/Proposition

200

In which order do you write your position/thesis?

4th/ second to the last

200

The Toulmin term for "evidence"

Grounds

200

Only two choices are presented when more exist.

Falde Dilemma

300

The opposing viewpoint to the writer’s position.

Counterclaim or counterargument

300

The part where you address counterarguments

Refutation/ Refutatio

300

The part where you identify shared values or goals.

Common Ground

300

The reasoning that connects evidence to claim

warrant

300

Bringing up an unrelated topic to distract.

Red Herring

400

Adjusting or limiting a claim to make it more precise

Qualifying a Claim

400

The main goal of the Classical Argument

To persuade the audience by presenting a clear claim and supporting it with strong evidence and reasoning.

400

The main goal of the Rogerian argument

To reach common ground, compromise, and reduce conflict between opposing positions.

400

The main goal of the Toulmin model

To analyze and break down an argument into its logical parts to show how and why it works.

400

Attacking the person instead of the argument.

Ad Hominem

500

Enumerate the three types of claims

CLAIM OF FACT, CLAIM OF VALUE, CLAIM OF POLICY

500

Who were the first to use the classical argument structure

Ancient Greek and Roman orators

500

Who is the proponent of the Rogerian Argument?

Carl Rogers

500

Whos is the proponent of the Toulmin Model?

Stephen Toulmin

500

Exaggerating someone’s argument to attack it.

Straw man

M
e
n
u