Argument Mapping
Argument Mapping
Argument Mapping
These sheets are based on the heuristics and Rationale software developed by Austhink (www.austhink.com).
Introduction
Argument mapping is a way to visually show the logical structure of arguments. You break up an argument into its constituent claims, and use lines, boxes, colors and location to indicate the relationships between the various parts. The resulting map allows us to see exactly how each part of an argument is related to every other part.
Definitions
Argument: a claim and reason(s) to believe that that claim is true. Conclusion: the main point an argument is trying to prove, usually a belief. Also called the position, the main claim, the issue at hand. Reason: evidence given to support the conclusion. Co-premise: the subset of a reason. Every reason has at least two copremises, and each of these copremises must be true for the reason to support the claim. Objection: a reason that a claim is false; evidence against a claim Rebuttal: an objection to an objection.
Things To Note Arguments can have many claims, many reasons, many objections and rebuttals, but only one conclusion. Distinguish a claim with a single reason (made up of two co-premises) from a claim with two independent reasons. Every argument is made up of one or more simple arguments. A simple argument is the building block of all arguments, consisting of one claim and one reason (with two or more co-premises). A complex argument, like the one above, has several simple arguments linked together. In the example above, there are four simple arguments, one objection, and one rebuttal. Together, they form a debate. The exact structure of an argument is very important. For example, if side A has two good reasons to conclude something, and their opponent (side B) thinks one of those reasons is bad, then As conclusion may still be true/warranted if the remaining, unobjected-to reason is convincing. An argument map can represent a debate by showing exactly where two sides disagree on the issue. In the above example, side B disagrees with side As conclusion, even though it accepts the reasons (1 and 2) that A gives. It disagrees with As conclusion because of a separate objection to the conclusion. Side A rebuts the objection of side B, thus (it hopes) invalidating the objection and saving its conclusion. Remember that an argument map shows the structure of the argument/debate every box is not necessarily true, but the first step is to understand the structure of the argument. Only then can you critique it.
Two Terms: Each box can only have two main terms, so that each box is either true or false, not both. If you have more than two terms in a single box, separate them into multiple boxes.