Sunday, February 12, 2012
Chain Arguments
Chain
arguments occur when there are at least three statements linked together. There
are two statements that are true that link together to come into one concluding
statement. The structure towards chain arguments are A to B, B to C, and then A
is to C. Chain arguments require concrete facts to be effective. If there are
not facts then it will not make the conclusion of the two statements true.
Chain arguments are very effective in writing. I usually use chain arguments to
get my point across if give the readers facts to support an argument. An
example of chain argument is that Girls like makeup. Susie likes makeup. Therefore,
Susie is a girl. This is a real basic example, but it gets the point
across. I think that chain arguments are the most effective way to argue
because the conclusion is based upon facts. There is no way to disagree with
the arguments if there are facts that back up the concluding statements.
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