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What is Argument

Encyclopedia of Information Communication Technology
A series of inferences from premises through intermediates to a conclusion. Premises are core ideas that are not inferred from other core ideas; intermediates are inferred from other cores, and other cores are inferred from them; the conclusion is inferred from other cores, but no other cores are inferred from it.
Published in Chapter:
Inference Tree Use to Design Arguments in Expository Reports
Jens Mende (University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa)
Copyright: © 2009 |Pages: 10
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-59904-845-1.ch056
Abstract
When they write essays, many students merely attempt ‘to fill pages with material gathered from sources’ (Erion, 2000). Consequently, they produce inane arguments of the form: Adams said this, Brown said that, Cohen said the other, etc. Conclusion: much has been written about this topic. This is unacceptable both in academic ICT courses and subsequently in the ICT profession. In academe, a written argument should ‘make a leap from the raw materials of the library to an informed opinion’ (Fasel, 1963). In the profession, a written argument should similarly make a leap from a present state of affairs to a desired future state. So in both situations, writers should be able to devise a report that contains an argument from available facts towards an intelligent conclusion. This kind of report is called an ‘expository report’ (Trimble, 1975), or an ‘argumentative report’ (Dykeman, 1974).
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PROLOG
A word or phrase that occurs in brackets after the head of the predicate, that makes up a fact in the Prolog database (really a predicate consists of a head and one or a number of arguments) for example, in this predicate “animal(mammal).” Mammal is the argument.
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Supporting Opinions in Diverse Professional Workplaces
The use of spoken, written, or visual language expressing a point of view.
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What Society Can and Cannot Learn From Coherence: Theoretical and Practical Considerations
Linguistic structure consisting of the premise set (i.e., known or assumed information) and the conclusion (what is supposed to follow from the premises).
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Exploring Ethics in Innovation: The Case of High-Fructose Corn Syrup
The attempt of justifying a conclusion, defending a standpoint or persuading an audience of one’s position. Employs critical reasoning and can be presented both in speech and written form.
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