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Rhetoric Written: Rhetoric Companion
Rhetoric Companion Review.
60
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Undergraduate 1
12/13/2011

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Term
What does it mean to prove something?
Definition
To obligate belief
Term
What is the law of the excluded middle?
Definition
That there is no middle ground between true and false. There is no third way.
Term
What is the law of identity?
Definition
If a statement is true then it is true. Truth is truth.
Term
What is the law of noncontradiction?
Definition
A statement cannot be both true and false. Truth excludes falsity.
Term
What is a fallacy?
Definition
Argumentation that is twisted in some fashion. There are fallacies of form and fallacies of distraction.
Term
What is the difference between deductive and inductive arguments?
Definition
A deductive argument is either valid or invalid. Deductive argumentation moves from general to particular.
An inductive argument is defined by being either strong or weak. Inductive argumentation moves from particular to general.
Term
What is a fallacy of form?
Definition
A fallacy of form occurs when a structure of the argument is wrong.
Term
What is a fallacy of distraction?
Definition
A fallacy of distraction occurs when the structure of the argument is being ignored, shifted or insulted in someway.
Term
What is a statement?
Definition
A claim of something that is either true or false.
Term
What is conclusion?
Definition
The establishment of whether a statement is without fallacy and either true or false.
Term
What is a premise?
Definition
The statement and information you are operating and reasoning with.
Term
What is a deductive argument?
Definition
A deductive argument is either valid or invalid. Deductive argumentation moves from general to particular.
Term
What is an inductive argument?
Definition
An inductive argument is defined by being either strong or weak. Inductive argumentation moves from particular to general.
Term
What is a valid argument?
Definition
A valid argument is one in which the truth of the premise would necessarily imply the truth of the conclusion. Validity is argumentative structure.
Term
What is an invalid argument?
Definition
An invalid argument is one in which the premise does not support the conclusion.
Term
What is a strong or weak argument?
Definition
A strong or weak argument occurs when a conclusion is arrived at by means of induction, that is going from the specific to the general.
Term
What is the square of opposition?
Definition
The square of opposition is a visual illustration to help one identify possible problems in arguments.
Term
What is a universal affirmative?
Definition
All P are Q. The A statemtent.
Term
What is an A statement?
Definition
A universal affirmative.
Subject: distributed
Predicate; undistributed
Term
What is a universal negative?
Definition
All P are not Q. The E statement.
Term
What is an E statement?
Definition
A universal negative.
Subject: distributed.
Predicate: distributed.
Term
What is a particular affirmative?
Definition
Some P are Q. The I statement.
Term
What is an I statement?
Definition
A particular affirmative.
Subject: undistributed.
Predicate: undistributed
Term
What is a particular negative?
Definition
Some P are not Q. The O statement.
Term
What is an O statement?
Definition
A particular negative.
Subject: undistributed.
Predicate: distributed.
Term
What is a distributed term?
Definition
This refers to a statement which is made of every member of the class.
Term
What is an undistributed term?
Definition
This refers to a statement which is not being made of every member of the class.
Term
What is a contrary relationship?
Definition
A to E. Both cannot be true but both can be false.
Term
What is a contradictory relationship?
Definition
A to O. I to E. They cannot both be true and they cannot both be false.
Term
What is subcontrary?
Definition
I to O. They can both be true but they cannot both be false.
Term
What is subimplication?
Definition
A to I. E to O. The truth of A requires the truth of I. Or the truth of E requires the truth of O.
Term
What is superimplication?
Definition
I to A. O to E. This is an implication of falsity. If the particular is false, the universal must be also.
Term
What is a categorical syllogism?
Definition
A deductive argument which is either valid or invalid. It has three statements: two premises and one conclusion. It follows the reasoning of:
All P are Q.
Some Q are R.
Therefore, some R are P.
Term
What is a major term?
Definition
The predicate term of the conclusion.
Term
What is a middle term?
Definition
That which is in both premises but not in the conclusion.
Term
What is a minor term?
Definition
The subject term of the conclusion.
Term
What is a major premise?
Definition
The premise which contains the major term.
Term
What is a minor premise?
Definition
The premise which contains the minor term.
Term
What is a sound argument?
Definition
A sound argument is one which is both valid and true.
Term
What is an unsound argument?
Definition
An unsound argument is one which is valid but wrong.
Term
What is the mood of an argument?
Definition
The mood is an abbreviation of how the argument looks in the categories created by the square of opposition. (e.g AII = one A statement followed by two I statements, concluded with an I)
Term
What is a figure in an argument?
Definition
The arrangement of the middle term in the argument.
Term
What are the five rules of validity?
Definition
1) In at least one premise, the middle term must be distributed.
2) If a term is distributed in the conclusion it must be distributed in its premise.
3) A valid syllogism cannot have two negative premises.
4) A valid syllogism cannot have a negative premise and an affirmative conclusion.
5) A valid syllogism cannot have two affirmative premises and a negative conclusion
Term
What is the fallacy of affirming the consequent?
Definition
If P, then Q.
Q.
Therefore, P.
(If a cow, then a mammal. A mammal, Therefore a cow.)
Term
What is the fallacy of denying to antecedent?
Definition
If P then Q.
Not P.
Therefore not Q.
(If a cow, then a mammal. Not a cow. Therefore not a mammal.)
Term
What is modus ponens?
Definition
A valid form. Way of Affirming.
If P then Q.
P.
Therefore Q.
If a cow, then a mammal. A cow. Therefore a mammal.
Term
What is modus tollens?
Definition
A valid form. Way of denying.
If P, then Q.
Not Q.
Therefore not P.
If a cow, then a mammal. Not a mammal. Therefore, not a cow.
Term
What are fallacies of distraction?
Definition
1) Ipse Dixit
2) Ad Populum
3) Ad Baculum
4) Ad Hominem
5) Bulverism.
6) Tu quoque
7) Ad ignoratium
8) Chronological Snobbery.
Term
What are fallacies of ambiguity?
Definition
1) Fallacy of equivocation
2) Fallacy of accent
3) Fallacy of selective arrangement.
4) Fallacy of amphiboly
5) Fallacy of composition.
6) Fallacy of division.
Term
What are fallacies of form?
Definition
1) Petitio Principii
2) Post hoc ergo propter hoc
3) Either/Or
4) A complex question.
5) Apriorism
Term
What are the three basic ways of using language?
Definition
Ordinary, scientific, and poetic.
Term
What is the analytic paradigm? What four things does it require?
Definition
Scientific communication utilizes a method which requires precision, quantification, abstraction, and direct correlation.
Term
What is a poetic paradigm? What four things does it require?
Definition
An approach that uses imprecision, that utilizes metaphor, imprecision, qualification, concrete images and oblique correlation.
Term
How is it that we learn more from a statement that is, strictly speaking, less true?
Definition
The listener can relate to the picture painted. More description is involved and the listener’s past experience is painted before them.
Term
State and explain/defend the main point of ND Wilson’s lecture week 7.
Definition
Love without truth is as gross  as truth without love. Who we are effects how we argue...
Term
What is the difference between expressions that are ordinary, scientific, and poetic?
Definition
1. Ordinary is basic. Scientific and Poetic are both divergent ways of communicating more accurately what we mean.
2. Scientific communication utilizes a method which requires precision, quantification, abstraction, and direct correlation.
3. Poetic requires imprecision, qualification, concrete images, and oblique correlation.
Term
Name the three elements in the poetic approach to meaning
Definition
Metaphor, simile, and personification.
Term
What is the difference between how we handle a poem and how we handle a mathematical table?
Definition
In the handling of a mathematical table we can be assured of the inerrancy of our understanding of it due to its epistemic nature. Poetry is not quantifiable and therefore it is impossible to even consider an interpretation of it to be inerrant.
Term
What is a chiasm?
Definition
When the construction of something in rhetoric or literature are repeated in reverse order, in the same of a modified form.
Term
How might this effect an outline.
Definition
It rewrites your understanding of it. Because the order is not abstract but intentionally crafted and specific.
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