Lecture Description
In this lecture from his Fayetteville State University Critical Thinking class, Dr. Sadler discusses the form of inductive arguments typically called argument from analogy. He provides a number of examples from everyday student life, politics, marketing, and product recommendations, and discusses what conditions are required for arguments from analogy to be strong inductive arguments.
Course Index
- Issues, Claims, Arguments
- Arguments and non-Arguments
- Value Judgements
- Complex Arguments, Unstated Premises
- Deductive and Inductive Arguments with Implicit Premises
- Deductive and Inductive Arguments 1
- Deductive and Inductive Arguments 2
- Deductive and Inductive Arguments 3
- Fallacies of Composition and Divison
- Information Sources
- Experts and Appeal to Authority
- Critical Thinking and Advertising
- Rhetorical Devices 1
- Rhetorical Devices 2
- Rhetorical Devices 3
- Fallacies 1
- Fallacies 2
- Fallacies 3
- Fallacies 4
- Fallacies 5
- Fallacies 6
- Inductive Arguments 1
- Inductive Arguments 2
- Inductive Arguments 3
Course Description
This is a series of 24 lectures from Dr. Sadler's Critical Thinking classes at Fayetteville State University, taught in Spring 2011. The textbook used was Moore And Parker's Critical Thinking 9th Ed.
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