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  1. Problems in Argument Analysis and Evaluation.Trudy Govier - 2018 - Windsor: University of Windsor.
    We are pleased to publish this WSIA edition of Trudy’s Govier’s seminal volume, Problems in Argument Analysis and Evaluation. Originally published in 1987 by Foris Publications, this was a pioneering work that played a major role in establishing argumentation theory as a discipline. Today, it is as relevant to the field as when it first appeared, with discussions of questions and issues that remain central to the study of argument. It has defined the main approaches to many of those issues (...)
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  • Reasoning.Michael Scriven - 1976 - New York: McGraw-Hill Companies.
    The Aims of the Book -/- 1. To improve your skill in analyzing and evaluating arguments and presentations of the kind you find in everyday discourse (news media, discussions, advertisements), textbooks, and lectures. 2. To improve your skill in presenting arguments, reports and instructions clearly and persuasively. 3. To improve your critical instincts, that is, your immediate judgments of your attitudes toward the communications and behavior of others and yourself, so that you consistently approach them with the standards of reason (...)
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  • (1 other version)Charity Begins at Home.Ralph H. Johnson - 1980 - Informal Logic 3 (3).
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  • Critical thinking in North America: A new theory of knowledge, learning, and literacy. [REVIEW]Richard W. Paul - 1989 - Argumentation 3 (2):197-235.
    The pace of change in the world is accelerating, yet educational institutions have not kept pace. Indeed, schools have historically been the most static of social institutions, uncritically passing down from generation to generation outmoded didactic, lecture-and-drill-based, models of instruction. Predictable results follow. Students, on the whole, do not learn how to work by, or think for, themselves. They do not learn how to gather, analyze, synthesize and assess information. They do not learn how to analyze the diverse logic of (...)
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  • (1 other version)What is Learned in Informal Logic Courses?John E. McPeck - 1991 - Teaching Philosophy 14 (1):25-34.
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  • Some Common Fallacies in Political Thinking.C. D. Broad - 1950 - Philosophy 25 (93):99 - 113.
    I Want to discuss and illustrate in this paper certain fallacies which we are all very liable to commit in our thinking about political and social questions. Perhaps “thinking” is rather too high-sounding a name to attach to the mental processes which lie behind most political talk. It is at any rate thinking of a very low grade, for a considerable proportion of such discussion in Press and Parliament and private conversation hardly rises above the intellectual level of disputes between (...)
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  • (1 other version)Logic and contemporary rhetoric: the use of reason in everyday life.Howard Kahane - 2001 - Belmont, CA: Wadsworth Thomson Learning. Edited by Nancy Cavender.
    [This book offers] compilation of examples from TV, newspapers, magazines, advertisements, and our nation's political dialogue.
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  • Critical Thinking: What can it be?Matthew Lipman - 1987 - Analytic Teaching and Philosophical Praxis 8 (1).
    Critical thinking is in vogue - in colleges and universities as well as in elementary and secondary schools. This fact alone is enough to give us pause: seldom do shifts in academic fashion happen concurrently at all educational levels.
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  • Introduction to logic.Nicholas Rescher - 1964 - New York,: St. Martin's Press.
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  • Practical Reasoning in Natural Language.Stephen Naylor Thomas - 1973 - Englewood Cliffs, NJ, USA: Prentice-Hall.
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  • (1 other version)Fallacies.C. L. Hamblin - 1970 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 160:492-492.
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  • Dialectics: a controversy-oriented approach to the theory of knowledge.Nicholas Rescher - 1977 - Albany: State University of New York Press.
    tational background of dialectic: the structure of formal disputation. Formal disputation Perhaps the clearest, and surely historically the most prominent, ...
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  • Introduction to Logic.R. H. Stoothoff - 1966 - Philosophical Quarterly 16 (65):399-400.
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  • From Axiom to Dialogue.E. M. Barth & E. C. W. Krabbe - 1985 - Studia Logica 44 (2):228-230.
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  • The Fallacy behind Fallacies.Gerald J. Massey - 1981 - Midwest Studies in Philosophy 6 (1):489-500.
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  • (1 other version)Dialectics: A Controversy-Oriented Approach to the Theory of Knowledge.Nicholas Rescher - 1977 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 12 (4):271-273.
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  • Dialectics: A Controversy-Oriented Approach to the Theory of Knowledge.John Kekes - 1979 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 39 (4):603-604.
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