Stephen Toulmin, R.I.P.
Posted: Wed Dec 16, 2009 4:56 pm
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/11/educa ... .html?_r=1
Toulmin’s most influential work was the Toulmin Model of Argumentation. In it, he identified six elements of a persuasive argument: claim, grounds, arrant, backing, qualifier and rebuttal.
In his seminal book The Uses of Argument (Cambridge University Press, 1958), he outlined the argument model. The book investigates the flaws of traditional logic, maintaining that some aspects of arguments can vary from field to field, while other aspects are consistent throughout all fields
I HAVE READ SEVERAL OF HIS BOOKS. VERY GOOD
I SEEM TO RECALL THAT I READ SOMEWHERE THAT TOULMIN WAS PRESENT AT WITTGENSTEIN/POPPER POKER INCIDENT? CAN ANYBODY CLARIFY?
Toulmin’s most influential work was the Toulmin Model of Argumentation. In it, he identified six elements of a persuasive argument: claim, grounds, arrant, backing, qualifier and rebuttal.
In his seminal book The Uses of Argument (Cambridge University Press, 1958), he outlined the argument model. The book investigates the flaws of traditional logic, maintaining that some aspects of arguments can vary from field to field, while other aspects are consistent throughout all fields
I HAVE READ SEVERAL OF HIS BOOKS. VERY GOOD
I SEEM TO RECALL THAT I READ SOMEWHERE THAT TOULMIN WAS PRESENT AT WITTGENSTEIN/POPPER POKER INCIDENT? CAN ANYBODY CLARIFY?