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| ==== Analogies ==== | ==== Analogies ==== | ||
| - | (Analogies do not count as the evidence itself; they are simply there to help one understand the argument) | + | (Analogies do not count as the evidence itself; they are simply there to help one understand the argument. When giving an analogy, it is also helpful to provide known limitations of the analogy: ways it is not a perfect representation of what it is an analogy for and " |
| ==== Notable Supporters ==== | ==== Notable Supporters ==== | ||
| - | (Please cite in full author, Chicago-style bibliography format) | + | (When citing, please use full author, Chicago-style bibliography format) |
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| If there are multiple lines of reasoning, the last four sections may be repeated for each line of reasoning (as needed) | If there are multiple lines of reasoning, the last four sections may be repeated for each line of reasoning (as needed) | ||
| - | ====== Counter-Argument | + | ====== Counter-Statement |
| - | [[~Sample statement]] | + | [[x Sample statement]] |
| - | (Counter-arguments are always the statement itself preceeded by "It is not that") | + | (Counter-arguments are always the statement itself preceeded by "It is not that" |
| (Important: counter-arguments do not refute any of the premises or the logic of the argument itself. Instead, they present a completely different argument which, if true, means that the statement here must be false (regardless of the arguments). In philosophy, this is called a [[https:// | (Important: counter-arguments do not refute any of the premises or the logic of the argument itself. Instead, they present a completely different argument which, if true, means that the statement here must be false (regardless of the arguments). In philosophy, this is called a [[https:// | ||