Waleed Mebane, a doctoral candidate in argumentation studies, will explore the topic of “Argument Mining” in a free public lecture February 16.
Waleed Mebane, a doctoral candidate in argumentation studies, will explore the topic of “Argument Mining” in a free public lecture February 16.
Philosophy professor Catherine Hundleby will present “Epistemic Coverage and the Argument from Ignorance” on Friday, January 12.
Philosophy professor Christopher Tindale will discuss “Arguing with extremism” in a free public lecture Wednesday.
A lecture Wednesday will discuss consideration of occupation and environment in understanding breast cancer.
Philosophy professor Christopher Tindale will suggest a way to prepare the field of informal logic to better deal with narrative and visual arguments in a free public presentation Tuesday, December 16.
“Static and dynamic models of argument” will review the advances informal logic has made to reframe argumentation in ways that fit its everyday uses, says Dr. Tindale, but he says a “static” conception continues to dog researchers.
The Centre for Research in Reasoning, Argumentation, and Rhetoric presents philosopher Guillaume Beaulac of Yale University on “A Taxonomy for Dual-Process Theories,” Thursday, November 13, at 4 p.m. in room 209, Essex Hall.
“Dual-process theories offer a rich framework to understand how the mind works, but to this day, very few have offered a way to compare how proposed accounts differ beyond the distinction between default-interventionist and parallel-competitive models,” Dr. Beaulac says.
A seminar Thursday will discuss ways to classify research in argumentation and informal logic.
Philosophy professor Douglas Walton will discuss a system for evaluating arguments in a free public lecture Thursday.
The Centre for Research in Reasoning, Argumentation and Rhetoric is offering two $1500 graduate student fellowships in the fall 2014 semester.
Windsor Studies in Argumentation has published Ralph Johnson’s essay collection, The Rise of Informal Logic, as its second volume.