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OVERVIEW: The way to well-written science
How to do the Course
PART I: Paragraphs and Sentences...
SET 1: The Parts of Arguments
SET 2: Indicator Words
SET 3: Refining Claims
SET 4: Locating Arguments in Prose
SET 5: Rationale's Essay Planner
SET 6: Assessing
SET 7 : More on Assessing |
Exercise 1
1.
Evaluate the following argument map:
Drag
this image onto the workspace to proceed. You must be using the inbuilt
browser in Rationale 1.3 or later.
Hints
-
Start
evaluating at the left-most basis box and work through one branch at a time
from bottom to top, and finish by evaluating the position
-
When
evaluating basis boxes, ask yourself: is this a reliable source of information?
Does this basis provide sufficient evidence for me to believe the claim
above it?
- When evaluating
reasons, ask yourself: what confidence do I have in this reason, given my
assessment of its basis?
- If you think
its basis is reliable, ask yourself: does this reason give support for
the position? How good a reason is it - strong or weak?
- If you think
its basis is unreliable, ask yourself: could I still reasonably accept
this claim on other grounds? If the answer is no, then the reason
can't provide any support for the position.
- Now evaluate
the position: what confidence do you have in this, given your evaluation of
the top layer of reasons? On balance, is there a better case for accepting
it, rejecting it, or taking no stand on the matter?
2. Check your work against the model.
Content of this page drawn in whole or part from the Austhink Rationale Exercises with permission from Austhink.
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