HON 102 Lecture 4: Chapter 4

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31 May 2016
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Strong argument a well-formed argument whose premises are reasonable and, in the case of cogent arguments, which is not defeated by one"s background evidence. The strength of an argument can vary from one person to another, depending on the person"s evidence. Deductively strong argument a valid argument with premises that are reasonable for a person to believe. The deductive strength of an argument can vary from one person to another, depending on the person"s evidence concerning the premises. An argument is deductively strong for a person iff: It"s reasonable for the person to believe all the argument"s premises. Defeated argument cogent argument with reasonable premises whose conclusion is made unreasonable for a person by the person"s background evidence. Whether an argument is defeated for a person depends on that person"s evidence. Inductively strong argument a cogent argument with reasonable premises that is not defeated by one"s background evidence. An argument is inductively strong for a person iff:

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