Read this section, which will give you some tips on how to spot an argument. While the premise and conclusion indicators are not guarantees of an argument, they can assist you in identifying an argument.
Complete Exercise 2, distinguishing arguments from non-arguments and identifying the conclusion of argument sentences. Despite the name, the conclusion often precedes the premises when we present arguments in ordinary language. When you finish the exercise, check your answers against the answer key.
Identifying arguments
The best way to identify whether an argument is present is to ask whether there
is a statement that someone is trying to establish as true by basing it on some
other statement. If so, then there is an argument present. If not, then there
isn't. Another thing that can help in identifying arguments is knowing certain
key words or phrases that are premise indicators or conclusion indicators. For
example, recall Sally's abortion argument:
Abortion is morally wrong because it is wrong to take the life of an
innocent human being, and a fetus is an innocent human being.
The word "because" here is a premise indicator. That is, "because" indicates
that what follows is a reason for thinking that abortion is morally wrong. Here is
another example:
I know that the student plagiarized since I found the exact same
sentences on a website and the website was published more than a year
before the student wrote the paper.
In this example, the word "since" is a premise indicator because what follows it
is a statement that is clearly intended to be a reason for thinking that the
student plagiarized (i.e., a premise). Notice that in these two cases, the premise
indicators "because" and "since" are interchangeable: I could have used
"because" in place of "since" or "since" in the place of "because" and the
meaning of the sentences would have been the same. In addition to premise
indicators, there are also conclusion indicators. Conclusion indicators mark that
what follows is the conclusion of an argument. For example,
Bob-the-arsonist has been dead for a year, so Bob-the-arsonist didn't set
the fire at the East Lansing Starbucks last week.
In this example, the word "so" is a conclusion indicator because what follows it
is a statement that someone is trying to establish as true (i.e., a conclusion).
Here is another example of a conclusion indicator:
A poll administered by Gallup (a respected polling company) showed
candidate x to be substantially behind candidate y with only a week left
before the vote, therefore candidate y will probably not win the election.
In this example, the word "therefore" is a conclusion indicator because what
follows it is a statement that someone is trying to establish as true (i.e., a
conclusion). As before, in both of these cases the conclusion indicators "so"
and "therefore" are interchangeable: I could have used "so" in place of
"therefore" or "therefore" in the place of "so" and the meaning of the
sentences would have been the same.
Table 1 contains a list of some common premise and conclusion indicators:
Premise indicators | Conclusion indicators |
---|---|
since |
therefore |
because | so |
for | hence |
as | thus |
given that | implies that |
seeing that | consequently |
for the reason that | it follows that |
is shown by the fact that | we may conclude that |
Although these words and phrases can be used to identify the premises and
conclusions of arguments, they are not failsafe methods of doing so. Just
because a sentence contains them does not mean that you are dealing with an
argument. This can easily be shown by examples like these:
I have been running competitively since 1999.
I am so happy to have finally finished that class.
Although "since" can function as a premise indicator and although "so" can
function as a conclusion indicator, neither one is doing so here. This shows that
you can't simply mindlessly use occurrences of these words in sentences to show
that there is an argument being made. Rather, we have to rely on our
understanding of the English sentence in order to determine whether an
argument is being made or not. Thus, the best way to determine whether an
argument is present is by asking the question: Is there a statement that
someone is trying to establish as true or explain why it is true by basing it on
some other statement? If so, then there is an argument present. If not, then
there isn't. Notice that if we apply this method to the above examples, we will
see that there is no argument present because there is no statement that
someone is trying to establish as true by basing it on some other statement. For
example, the sentence "I have been running competitively since 1999" just
contains one statement, not two. But arguments always require at least two
separate statements - one premise and one conclusion, so it cannot possibly be
an argument.
Another way of explaining why these occurrences of "so" and "since" do not
indicate that an argument is present is by noting that both premise indicators
and conclusion indicators are, grammatically, conjunctions. A grammatical
conjunction is a word that connects two separate statements. So, if a word or
term is truly being used as a premise or conclusion indicator, it must connect
two separate statements. Thus, if "since" were really functioning as a premise
indicator in the above example then what followed it would be a statement. But
"1999" is not a statement at all. Likewise, in the second example "so" is not
being used as a conclusion indicator because it is not conjoining two separate
statements. Rather, it is being used to modify the extent of "happy". In
contrast, if I were to say "Tom was sleeping, so he couldn't have answered the
phone," then "so" is being used as a conclusion indicator. In this case, there
are clearly two separate statements ("Tom was sleeping" and "Tom couldn't
have answered the phone") and one is being used as the basis for thinking that
the other is true.
If there is any doubt about whether a word is truly a premise/conclusion
indicator or not, you can use the substitution test. Simply substitute another
word or phrase from the list of premise indicators or conclusion indicators and
see if the resulting sentence still makes sense. If it does, then you are probably
dealing with an argument. If it doesn't, then you probably aren't. For example,
we can substitute "it follows that" for "so" in the Bob-the-arsonist example:
Bob-the-arsonist has been dead for a year, it follows that Bob-the-arsonist
didn't set the fire at the East Lansing Starbucks last week.
However, we cannot substitute "because" for "so" in the so-happy-I-finished-
that-class example:
I am because happy to have finally finished that class.
Obviously, in the latter case the substitution of one conclusion indicator for
another makes the sentence meaningless, which means that the "so" that
occurred originally wasn't functioning as a conclusion indicator.
Source: Matthew J. Van Cleave
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.