Practical reasoning in natural language
Written especially for beginners, this basic manual/workbook shows how to analyze and evaluate any passage of reasoning or argumentation as it actually occurs in natural language contexts -- e.g., books, articles, essays, speeches, editorials, conversations. This book presents a general method of "natural logic" by which the logical structure of any argument --Scientific, philosophic, mathematical, political, religious, ethical, legal, "inductive", "deductive", modal, semantic, syntactic, evidentiary, etc. -- can be graphically represented without; employing traditional methods used in logic textbooks (e.g. truth-tables, Venn diagrams, etc.). It shows how these techniques can be used to analyze a situation involving many pros and cons, and to identify the argument in discourse where the reasoning is obscure, complex or disorganized
Print Book, English, ©1997
4th ed
Prentice Hall, Upper Saddle River, N.J., ©1997