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Index
ARGUMENTATION APPROACHES TO THEORY FORMATION
Editorial page
Title page
Copyright page
CONTRIBUTORS
PREFACE
Table of contents
PART ONE: RE-MODELLING LOGIC
INTRODUCTIONTO PART ONE: RE-MODELLING LOGIC
A NECESSARY COMPONENT OF LOGIC: EMPIRICAL ARGUMENTATION ANALYSIS
1. Logic has empirical components and needs empirical research
2. 'Argumentation analysis'
3. Options in a clarification and assessment game
4. Analysis of agreement and pseudo-agreement
5. Degree of definiteness of intervtion (discrimination acuity) as a factor in argumentation
6. The hermeneutical spiral as a facton in argumentation
NOTES
DIE DIALOGISCHE BEGRÜNDUNG VON LOGIKKALKÜLEN
7. Drej Typen von Logikkalkülen
2. Das Begründungsproblem
3. Empraktische εinführung der Verwendungsregeln
4. Materiale Dialoge. Semantik
5. Erweiterungen der strengen Dialoge. Liberalisierungen
6. Die effektive Dialogregel
7. Das Problem der Konsistenz. Schnittregel
8. Die klassische Dialogregel
9. Die Beziehung materialer Dialoge zu Logikkalkülen
10. Zun Frage der sog. Vollständigkeit
11. Vollständigkeit ohne Semantik
SHERLOCK HOLMESCONFRONTS MODERN LOGIC: TOWARD A THEORY OF INFORMATION-SEEKING THROUGH QUESTIONING
1. Sherlock Holmes vs. philosophers on deduction
2. Making, tacit information explicit throught guestioning
3 . The structure of guestion - inference complexes
4. On the principle of total evidence. Bayesianism
5. The role of observations
6. Question-answer seguences as games against Nature
7. Payoffs and strategies
8. Deductions sometimes replaceable by guestions and answers
NOTES
SEMANTICAL GAMES AND TRANSCENDENTAL ARGUMENTS
1. Kant on the logic of existence
2. Seeking, and finding, and game-theoretical semantics
3. A transcendental refutation of certain related views
4. A test-case: branching guantifiers
5. Material vs. logical truth, formal argumentation, and semantics
6. From semantical games to dialogical ones
NOTES
TOWARDS A GENERAL THEORY OF ARGUMENTATION
1. Logic and rhetorics, heuristics, proof theory
2. Theory of discussion
3. What are discussions?
4. Reduction to the theory of ( inter-) action
5. "Proponent", "Opponent", "defence." and "attack"
6. Systematic connections between the theory of games and some theories discussed at this conference
7. Hamblin's theory. What is an argument?
8. Decomposition of argumentative texts. Sub-games
9. Equivocation and use of metaphors
NOTES
THEORY OF ARGUMENTATION AND THE DIALECTICAL GARB OF FORMAL LOGIC
NOTES
REFERENCES
EIN KONSTRUKTIVER WEG ZUR SEMANTIK DER "MÖGLICHEN WELTEN"
1. Dialogebenen. Spielregel
2. Beispiele
3. Beziehungzu den modallogischen Standardsystemen
PART TWO: CHOOSING THE RULES
INTRODUCTION TO PART TWO: CHOOSING THE RULES
ON THE CRITERIA FOR THE CHOICE OF THE RULES OF DIALOGIC LOGIC
1. A game-theoretic pragmatic conception of truth
2. Specifying the game ("global" gamerules)
3. Argument rules ("Local" game rules)
4. Subjunction
5. Formal winning - strategy and formal truth
6. A theorem of formal dialogic logic
NOTES
REFERENCES
A NORMATIVE-PRAGMATICAL FOUNDATION OF THE RULES OF SOME SYSTEMS OF FORMAL DIALECTICS
1. New foundations. Stalemental dialogue altitudes
2. Two purposes -- presentation of the dialectical systems, and the problem of fallacy
3. Basic norms and ends; implementations
4. Dialectics should be systematic and thoroughgoing
5. Dialectics should be orderly and dynamic
6. εpilogue: The three elementary phases of a critical discussion
PART THREE: DESCRIBING ARGUMENTATIVE DIALOGUES
INTRODUCTION TO PART THREE: DESCRIBING ARGUMENTATIVE DIALOGUES
A SET OF CONCEPTS FOR THE STUDY OF DIALOGIC ARGUMENTATION
1. Introduction
2. Argumentation - informally described
3. Dialogue bases
4. Cooperative argumentative dialogues and argumentation
NOTES
REFERENCES
MONTAGUE-GRAMMERS FOR ARGUMENTATIVE DIALOGUES
1. Introduction
2. Background and motivation
3. An example of a dialogue
4. A MONTAGUE-grammar
NOTES
REFERENCES
PART FOUR: ANALYSING PHILOSOPHY
INTRODUCTION TO PART FOUR: ANALYSING PHILOSOPHY
NOTES
FORMAL DIALECTICS AS IMMANENT CRITICISM OF PHILOSOPHICAL SYSTEMS
1. Introduction
2. The provocative thesis
3. Criticalinterpretation of the logical constants
4. Information-seeking interpretation of the logical constants
NOTES
REFERENCES
AN APPLICATION OF EMPIRICAL ARGUMENTATION ANALYSIS TO SPINOZA'S"ETHICS"
1. The propositions of the "Ethics" conceived of as arguments in a debate
2. Spinoza's theses of eguivalence
3. Eguivalences as arguments
NOTES
FINITE DEBATES ABOUT "THE INFINITE"
1. Two philosophical paradigms
2. "Tongue-twisting for the sake of consistency": a recent de-scription of the Weierstrass method
3. Two-role logic and the notion of 'limit'
4. Instantaneous velocities
5. Paradigmatically misleading expressions
6. Conclusion
NOTES
REFERENCES
PART FIVE: ANALYSING INTERACTION
INTRODUCTION TO PART FIVE: ANALYSING INTERACTION
A DECISION-THE ORETICAL INTERPRETATION OF DIALOGUES
NOTES
REFERENCES
ON THE PHILOSOPHY OF ARGUMENT AND THE LOGIC OF COMMON MORALITY.
1. Dialectical argument and first principles
2. The fundamental principle of morality
3. A dialogical approach to the logic of common morality
NOTES
THEORY OF ARGUMENTATION: A CHRONOLOGICAL BIBLIOGRAPHY OF SOME IMPORTANT WORKS
A. CHRONOLOGICAL BIBLIOGRAPHY
B INDEX OF NAMES TO CHRONOLOGICAL BIBLIOGRAPHY
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