Argument Basics
Types of Arguments
Logical Fallicies & Non Arguments
Evidence & Support
Evaluating Arguments
100

A set of statements where some serve as premises and one serves as the conclusion is called this.




What is an argument?



100

In this type of argument, the conclusion necessarily follows from the premises.




What is a deductive argument?


100

Statements that explain why or how something is the case but do not attempt to prove a conclusion are called these.


What are explanations?


100

Facts, statistics, or examples used to support a claim.


What is evidence?


100

This criterion asks whether an argument is clear and unambiguous.


What is clarity?

200

The main point an argument is trying to prove.


What is a conclusion?

200

This type of argument has a conclusion that is not fully guaranteed by its premises.



What is an inductive argument?


200

This type of statement follows an “If…then…” structure but is not an argument.



What is a conditional statement?


200

A trustworthy and knowledgeable source is considered this.


What is credible?

200

This type of thinking starts with the conclusion and works backward to find premises.


 What is bottom-up thinking?



300

 A statement that provides support for a conclusion.



What is a premise?


300

An argument that claims one event leads to another.


 What is a cause-and-effect argument?

300

The “if” portion of a conditional statement is known by this term.


 What is the antecedent?



300

This evaluation criterion asks whether premises actually matter to proving the conclusion.



What is relevance?

300

This approach begins with premises and determines what conclusion follows from them.



What is top-down thinking?


400

An argument always contains premises, a conclusion, and this connecting element.




 What is an inference?


400

An argument that eliminates alternatives to support a conclusion.


 What is an argument by elimination?


400

The “then” portion of a conditional statement is known as this.

What is the consequent?



400

Evidence that comes from systematic investigation and data collection.


What is empirical evidence?


400

An argument is strong when the premises make the conclusion this.


What is probable?


500

Statements such as commands, questions, and exclamations are excluded from being this.





 What is a proposition?



500

An argument that compares two similar things to draw a conclusion.



 What is an analogy?

500

Misrepresenting someone’s argument to make it easier to attack.


 What is a straw man fallacy?

500

When evidence directly relates to the claim being made, it is this.

What is relevant?

500

Identifying assumptions helps uncover hidden ____ in an argument.


What are premises?