How Good Is the Evidence: Intuition, Personal Experience, Testimonials, and Appeals to Authority? Flashcards

1
Q

To Determine Dependability

A
What is your proof?
Where is the evidence?
Are you sture that's true?
How do you know that's true?
Why do you believe that?
Can you prove it?
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2
Q

Factual Claims

A

Conclusions, Reasons, or Assumptions made by the writer

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3
Q

Examples of Factual Claims

A

Descriptive Conclusions
Reasons used to support either descriptive or prescriptive conclusions
Descriptive Assumptions

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4
Q

When Factual Claims Should be Accepted as Dependaple

A

When the claim appears to be undisputed common knowledge
When the claim is the conclusion from a well-reasoned argument
When the claim is adequately supported by solid evidence in the same communication or by other evidence that we know.

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5
Q

Evidence

A

Explicit information shared by the communicator that is used to back up or to justify the dependability of a factual claim
Prescriptive arguments - needed to support reasons that are factual claims
Descriptive arguments - needed to directly support a descriptive conclusion

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6
Q

Kinds of Evidence

A
Intuition
Personal Experience
Testimonials
Appeals to Authorities
Personal Observations
Case Examples
Research Studies
Analogies
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7
Q

Intuition

A

Relying on common sense, gut feelings, or hunches; private, others have no way to judge its dependability; provides no solid basis for deciding which ones to believe; Relies on unconscious processing that largely ignores relevant evidence reflects strong biases

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8
Q

Personal Experience

A

Very vivid in our memories, we rely on them as evidence to support a belief; not enough to give a representative sample of experiences

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9
Q

Hasty Generalization Fallacy

A

A person draws a conclusion about a large group based on experiences with only a few members of the group

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10
Q

Personal Testimonials

A

Quoted statements based on personal experiences of other people

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11
Q

Problems with Testimonials

A

Selectivity
Personal Interest
Omitted Information
The Human Factor

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12
Q

Selectivity

A

Those trying to persuade us have usually carefully selected the testimony they use. What was the experience like for those whom we have not heard from?

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13
Q

Personal Interest

A

People’s gain from their testimony

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14
Q

Omitted Information

A

Testimonials rarely provide sufficient information about the basis for the judgement

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15
Q

The Human Factor

A

They come from human beings and they are very vivid and detailed, a marked contrast to statistics and graphs, which tend to be abstract

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16
Q

Appeals to Authority

A

Appealing to sources that are supposed to know more than most of us about a given topic-so-called experts;

17
Q

Questions about Authorities

A

How much expertise or training does the autority have about the subject about which he is communicating?
Was the authority in a position to have especially good access to pertinent facts?
Is there a good reason to believe that the authority is relatively free of distorting influences?
Has the authority developed a reputation for frequently making depandable claims? Have we been able to rely on this authority in the past?

18
Q

Questions about Personal Testimony

A

What biases or interests might be affecting the person’s testimony?
Does the person have any expertise to asist his or her judgment?
How do the person’s value assumptions affect his or her testimony?
Whose personal testimony might be helpful is assessing this person’s testimony?
What information has been left out in this personal testimony?