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Test your basic knowledge |
Public Debating
Start Test
Study First
Subject
:
soft-skills
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Ill - Blame - Cure - Cost
Hasty Generalization
Stock Issues
Appeal to Authority
Appeal to Ignorance
2. Demonstrating respect and care for the audience
Locus of Quantity
Associated Commonplaces
Good Will (Ethos)
Aristotle
3. Ideas repeated
Ethos
Litotes
Blame
Exergasia
4. Bases inferences on what we know of how people act in a rational/predictable way - in order to determine the truth
(Argument of ) General probability
Ad Hominem
Epistrophe
Emotionally Charged (Language)
5. Values more over less in terms of quantitative outcomes (the greatest good for the greatest number)
Sound
Epistrophe
Locus of Quantity
Euphimism
6. Is another variation of the tu quoque; it is when you justify a wrong by saying that this is the way things have always been done
Tokenism
Popular Democracy
Traditional Wisdom (Fallacy)
Refutation Potential
7. Accepting a token gesture for something more substantive
Tokenism
Division
Checking for Narrative argument
Rhetoric
8. Civil rights - economic justice - environmental stewardship - government as safety net - worker's rights - diversity
Non Sequitur
(Special Topoi for) Democrats
Protagoras
Epanalepsis
9. Repetition of the endings of successive clauses - sentences - or lines.
Appeal to Ignorance
Epistrophe
Begging the Question
Cure
10. Professional Standing - Fame (Ethos)
Disjunctive (Syllogism)
Status
Quantity Quality Essence Existent
Mercenary Scientists
11. Involves a large number of people; from Ill stock issue - Produces a large amount of harm; from Ill stock issue
Isocrates
Quantitative (significance)
Composition
Presumption
12. Is a variation of Appeal to Ignorance. It is when you accept an argument that the presumption lies with one side and the other side has the burden of proving its case when the reverse is actually true
Shifting the Burden of Proof
Stock Issues
Rhetoric
Correctio
13. All A are B - all C are B - therefore all A are C
Litotes
Invalid (Categorical Syllogism)
Sophist
Cure
14. They stablish an arena for argumentation by defining ground for a dispute and issues of controversy. Typically - one side affirms the resolution and one side negates the resolution.
Epistrophe
Ill
Stasis
Debate Resolutions
15. Anticipatory refutation - in which you preempt an opposition argument before it is even offered.
Grounds (or data)
Small Sample
Prolepsis
Sign
16. Is the metaphor appropriate? The key to ____ is matching strategy to situation.
Begging the Question
Decorum
Division
Epistrophe
17. Can the sign be found without the thing for which it stands? Is an alternative explanation of the maning of the sign more credible? Are there countering signs that indicate that his one sign is false?
Narrative
Euphimism
(Argument from) Sign
Checking for Sign argument
18. Attempts to assign responsibility for the existence of the ill to the current system. Needs to connect the ill to the policy in order for it to be changed. Must Have: 1. Structural Inherency: bad structure/lack of structure 2. Attitudinal Inherency:
Questionable Cause
Hasty Generalization
Conjectural (Stasis)
Blame
19. Drawing an analogical conclusion when the cases compared are not relevantly alike
Appeal to Authority
First
Questionable Analogy
Consistency
20. Does the moral really follow from the story? Is the narrative plausible and coherent? Are the characterizations consistent?
Metaphor
Epanalepsis
Questionable Cause
Checking for Narrative argument
21. The process of discrediting someone's argument by revealing weaknesses in it or presenting a counterargument
Rhetoric
Hypothetical (Syllogism)
Consistency
Refutation
22. Is a variety of Hasty Generalization; it is when you draw conclusions about a population on the basis of a sample that is too small to be a reliable measure of that population
Questionable Cause
Mixed Metaphor
Decision Rules
Small Sample
23. The opposite of hyperbole - this is a deliberate understatement for effect.
Litotes
Epistrophe
Fallacies
Warrant
24. A or B Not A Therefore - B
Disjunctive (Syllogism)
Consistency
Questionable Cause
Exergasia
25. Accepting an argument by example that reasons from specific to general on the basis of relevant but insufficient information or evidence.
Categorical (Syllogism)
Syllogism
Hasty Generalization
Litotes
26. Erroneously accusing others of fallacious reasoning
Checking for Cause argement
Composition
Presumption
False Charge of Fallacy
27. Values what is unique - irreplaceable or original
Honesty - Dedication - Courage
Locus of Quality
Modus Ponens
Begging the Question
28. A metaphor that gives attributes to a nonhuman thing
Enthymeme
Composition
Post hoc - ergo propter hoc
Personification
29. A field of scholarship devoted to how arguments work
Denying the Antecedent (INVALID)
Exergasia
Simile
Rhetoric
30. Common practice and traditional wisdom fallacies are categories of _____
Checking for Sign argument
Debate Resolutions
Tu Quoque
Warrant
31. A metaphor with a vehicle that draws upon a human experience that is universal
Refutation Potential
Litotes
Archetypal (Metaphor)
Cicero's Four Stasis Points
32. Misrepresenting an opponent's position as more extreme than it really is and then attacking that version - or attacking a weaker opponent while ignoring a stronger one.
Small Sample
Protagoras
Straw Person
Ill
33. Draws a conclusions about ONE MEMBER of a GROUP based on a general rule about all members
Isocrates
Accident
Structural (inherency)
Claim
34. What places do procedural stasis usually occupy in an argument?
Second (or) Third
Metaphor
Analogy
(Argument from) Sign
35. Is another variety of Hasty Generalization. It is when you reason from a sample that is not representative (typical) of the population from which it was drawn.
Checking for Cause argement
Unrepresentative Sample
Shifting the Burden of Proof
Valid
36. 'If two things are alike in most respects - they will be alike in this respect too' Warrant for what arg?
Analogy
Hasty Generalization
(Argument by) Analogy
Cause 9Arguing that something caused something else)
37. Ending of one repeated at the beginning of another
Protagoras
Fallacies
Anaphora
Anadiplosis
38. Taught by sophists; provides tools to recognize good arguments from bad ones
Shifting the Burden of Proof
Plato
Rhetoric
Culturetypal (Metaphor)
39. Appeals from the character of the speaker
Straw Person
Ethos
Situationally flawed
Consistency
40. Incorrectly assuming that one choice or another must be made when other choices are available or when no choice must be made
Sophist
False Dichotomy
Exergasia
Ill
41. The system for classifying disassociated terms (visually)
Charisma
Value Hierarchies
Cicero's Four Stasis Points
Conceding Arguments
42. Personal charm - sex appeal - leadership qualities (Ethos)
Hypothetical (Syllogism)
Personification
Charisma
Epanalepsis
43. 'Bad eggs are all you are likely to get from a bad crow' was said where?
Epistrophe
Correctio
Conjectural (Stasis)
(at the) Corax (and) Tisias trial
44. Focuses on inadequacies or problems in the status quo - must be significant if a change is to be made. Must Have: 1. Quantitative significance: affects lots of people 2. Qualitative significance: is of bad quality
Unsound
Composition
Cure
Ill
45. Special Topoi and Loci of the Preferable - what kind of args?
Straw Person
Charisma
Metaphor
Value-Oriented Arguments
46. These seats or commonplaces of argument suggest inferences that arguers might make that are based on the habits of thought and value hierarchies that everyone shares
(at the) Corax (and) Tisias trial
Loci of the Preferable
Categorical (Syllogism)
Refutation Potential
47. _______ in ancient Greece spurred the need for the use of rhetoric in everyday life.
Popular Democracy
Burden of proof
Metaphor
Personification
48. Asks - 'is it?' Involves a question of fact (past - present - future)
Plato
Litotes
Euphimism
Conjectural (Stasis)
49. Did not pay Corax for sophistry lessons and was taken to court
Sign
Popular Democracy
Metaphor
Tisias
50. Arguing without evidence that a given event is the first of a series of steps that will inevitably lead to some outcome.
Red Herring
Slippery Slope (Fallacy)
Anadiplosis
Ambiguity