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Circular reasoning
Authors:Lance J. Rips
Affiliation:1. University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Panhandle Research and Extension Center, 4502 Ave. I, Scottsbluff, NE 69361, USA;2. Department of Animal and Range Sciences, New Mexico State University, Box 30003, Las Cruces, NM 88003, USA;3. Northern Agricultural Research Center, Montana State University, 3848 Fort Circle, Havre, MT 59501, USA
Abstract:Good informal arguments offer justification for their conclusions. They go wrong if the justifications double back, rendering the arguments circular. Circularity, however, is not necessarily a single property of an argument, but may depend on (a) whether the argument repeats an earlier claim, (b) whether the repetition occurs within the same line of justification, and (c) whether the claim is properly grounded in agreed‐upon information. The experiments reported here examine whether people take these factors into account in their judgments of whether arguments are circular and whether they are reasonable. The results suggest that direct judgments of circularity depend heavily on repetition and structural role of claims, but only minimally on grounding. Judgments of reasonableness take repetition and grounding into account, but are relatively insensitive to structural role.
Keywords:Reasoning  Argumentation
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