**A provocative novel about the fallout from a search for truth by the author of the national bestseller _The Lifeboat. _** For Maggie Rayburn--wife, mother, and secretary at a munitions plant--life is pleasant, predictable, and, she assumes, secure. When she finds proof of a high-level cover-up o
Think Again: How to Reason and Argue
β Scribed by Walter Sinnott-armstrong
- Publisher
- Oxford University Press
- Year
- 2018
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 122 KB
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9780190627119
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Our personal and political worlds are rife with arguments and disagreements, some of them petty and vitriolic. The inability to compromise and understand the opposition is epidemic today, from countries refusing to negotiate, to politicians pandering to their base. Social media has produced a virulent world where extreme positions dominate. In most of these disagreements, parties yell at each other, very little progress is made, and the end result is a hardening (or further widening) of positions. There is however, such a thing as 'good' arguments. Arguments that offer reasons on both sides can ultimately allow for some mutual understanding and respect, and even if neither party is convinced by the other, the possibility of compromise can result.
Sinnott-Armstrong's book shows the importance of good arguments and reveals common misunderstandings about them. Many people see an argument just as a means to persuade other people or beat them in an intellectual competition. Sinnott-Armstrong sees them as much more essential-as a means to play a constructive role in the way we interact with each other. He shows the way out of the impasse by introducing readers to what makes a good argument. In clear, lively, and practical prose, and using plentiful examples from politics, popular culture, and everyday life, he introduces the reader to topics such as: what defines an argument; the role that reasons play in arguments; the pieces that make up good arguments; what arguments can accomplish effectively; the difference between essential terms like deductive, inductive, and abductive in creating an argument; and how to spot fallacies in others' arguments. Armed with these tools, Sinnott-Armstrong wants readers to be able to spot bad reasoning and bad arguments, and to advance their own view in a forceful and logical way-with an eye toward effective resolution of disputes.
**
ISBN : 9780190627126
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
An ancient guide for believers and nobelievers
**The definitive guide to getting your way, revised and updated with new material on writing, speaking, framing, and other key tools for arguing more powerfully** **"Cross Cicero with David Letterman and you get Jay Heinrichs."βJoseph Ellis, Pulitzer Prizeβwinning author of *The Quartet* and *
Set in a Colorado ski town, Kaya McLaren's _How I Came To Sparkle Again_ is a remarkable breakout novel that chronicles three people and their journey from loss to love; heartbreak to hope Jill Anthony spent her young adulthood in the ski town of Sparkle, Colorado. But more than a decade ha
Reginald Gibbons collects here a lifetime's worth of thoughts on composing and translating poetry. Not a manifesto or a general theory of the lyric, rather, the book explores how a poem thinks: that is, what results from the circumstances of a poet's native language, choice of words and topics, the
To write or read a poem is often to think in distinctively poetic waysβguided by metaphors, sound, rhythms, associative movement, and more. Poetryβs stance toward language creates a particular intelligence of thought and feeling, a compressed articulation that expands inner experience, imagining wit