Assignment:
Write a complete 2-4 pages paper that addresses the following:
Part 1:
Please find an argument to analyze. Be creative! Some suggestions are to use a commercial, letter to the editor (or op/ed piece). Analyze the argument you choose as below:
1. What is the main purpose of the argument?
2. Is it inductive? Deductive?
3. Are there any fallacies being used? If so, which ones?
Part 2:
Does the argument align with a philosophical theory or theorist? Choose one philosophical theory or theorist and explain - from that perspective - what you would change to make the argument better. Think about the steps that you could use to improve the argument. For example, if you pick Socrates as a theorist thinks of how Socrates would reflect upon and engage the argument for change.
Look for common fallacies like:
• Circular thinking - typically restating the premise in the conclusion and creating a "circular" argument
• Appeals to authority - generally this fallacy considers an argument that we should listen to based on some "false" or "non" authority.
Is this happening in your argument example?
• False cause - in this fallacy the writer or speaker attributes a "false" cause to some effect or result (often you will see superstitious thinking used here).
• Sweeping generalizations - this fallacy occurs when an individual makes generalizations (usually stereotypical thinking)
• Equivocation - in this fallacy a person confuses two senses of the meaning of a word (like a free animal- is it free because it doesn't cost anything or is it free because it is not in a "cage"?)
• Red herring - very common in political settings. This fallacy is a distraction (think of a big red fish - pretty distracting, right?)
Utilize at least 2-3 credible sources to support the arguments presented in the paper. Make sure you cite them appropriately within your paper, and list them in APA format on your Reference page.