4984281026 | Argument | is a serious of statements intended to justify some opinion. The three parts are claim, evidence, interpretation | 0 | |
4984281118 | Fallacy | is a weak interpretation of evidence, as opposed to a valid, strong, or convincing interpretation of evidence. The three examples analogy, generalization, paraphase | 1 | |
4984283503 | Justification | Is what defines a claim as being something worth arguing about the claim,evidence, and interpretation | 2 | |
4984284965 | Claim/Thesis | is a opinion that can be justified by further evidence and interpretation/ ideas that you plan to present in a argument | 3 | |
4984284966 | Conclusion | argument drives logically from the major and minor propositiones | 4 | |
4984286493 | Counterargument | is an alternative interpretation of evidence that challenges rather then supports a claim | 5 | |
4984286494 | Warrant | is a stated or unstated belief, rule, or principle that underlies an argument | 6 | |
4984292281 | Refutation/Rebuttal | the acknowledgement and handling of opposing viewpoints | 7 | |
4984294493 | Interpetation | is the bridge you build between widely-accepted evidence and your widely-debated claims | 8 | |
4984297746 | Three examples of effective interpretation | 1. accurate analogies between evidence and claim 2. accurate generalization from evidence 3. accurate paraphrases of accepted opinions | 9 | |
4984302274 | Major Propositions | main point of an argument which is supported by the minor propositions | 10 | |
4984693967 | Minor | the reasons you offer in support of the major propositions | 11 | |
4984302275 | Qualification | using certain words in a claim like Usually, Probably | 12 | |
4984306332 | Evidence | is that part of the argument that is interpreted in support of the claim | 13 |
AP Language Set 1 Flashcards
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