Preface
Origins, Preconceptions and Problems
Contexts of Dialogue
Argument Diagramming
Shorter Case Studies
Longer Case Studies
Fallacies, Faults, Blunders and Errors
Revising the Textbooks
A Theory of Begging the Question
Bibliography
Index
This book offers a new theory of begging the question as an informal fallacy, within a pragmatic framework of reasoned dialogue as a normative theory of critical argumentation.
DOUGLAS N. WALTON is Professor of Philosophy at the University
of Winnipeg and Fellow-in-Residence of the Netherlands Institute of
Advanced Study. He is the author of numerous works on informal
logic and argumentation, including Informal Fallacies
formal Logic
actical Reasoning
and Question-Reply Argumentation (Greenwood Press, 1989).
?This study of a single argumentative fallacy should be of broad
interest. Walton, having written extensively on informal logic and
the traditional fallacies, is a master of the subject. Begging the
question is seemingly one of the simpler fallacies, but one that is
quite difficult to pin down. Walton exhibits excellent historical
scholarship in tracing the origins of the label "begging the
question" that has been applied to various circular arguments. The
discussion of more than 100 examples said to exhibit the fallacy
provides a framework for resolving many issues in informal logic.
The key to understanding the sense in which apparently circular
arguments are fallacious is the context of the dialogue in which
the arguments appear. The bibliography surveys a wide range of
relevant literature. This work will be of particular interest to
those teaching or taking an introductory logic course. It should
interest anyone concerned with effective argumentation, which is
most everyone. Upper-division undergraduate and graduate
collections.?-Choice
"This study of a single argumentative fallacy should be of broad
interest. Walton, having written extensively on informal logic and
the traditional fallacies, is a master of the subject. Begging the
question is seemingly one of the simpler fallacies, but one that is
quite difficult to pin down. Walton exhibits excellent historical
scholarship in tracing the origins of the label "begging the
question" that has been applied to various circular arguments. The
discussion of more than 100 examples said to exhibit the fallacy
provides a framework for resolving many issues in informal logic.
The key to understanding the sense in which apparently circular
arguments are fallacious is the context of the dialogue in which
the arguments appear. The bibliography surveys a wide range of
relevant literature. This work will be of particular interest to
those teaching or taking an introductory logic course. It should
interest anyone concerned with effective argumentation, which is
most everyone. Upper-division undergraduate and graduate
collections."-Choice
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