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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. An irrelevant attack on an opponent rather than on the opponent's evidence or arguments; this is literally translated as an argument 'to the person'
Popular Democracy
Shifting the Burden of Proof
Ad Hominem
(Special Topoi for) Republicans
2. Accepting the word of an alleged authority when we should not because the person does not have expertise on this particular issue or s/he cannot be trusted to give an unbiased opinion.
Non Sequitur
Appeal to Authority
Popular Democracy
Tools of Refutation
3. When more than one vehicle is used for the same tenor - and those vehicles appear in close proximity to each other
Mixed Metaphor
Simile
Cost
Checking for Testimony argument
4. If A then B Not A Therefore not B
Tools of Refutation
Antithesis
Epistrophe
Denying the Antecedent (INVALID)
5. Juxtaposition of contrasting words or ideas
Hyperbole
Antithesis
Formal Logic
Cure
6. 'X is an sign of Y' is what arg's warrant?
Sign
Metaphor
Euphimism
Questionable Analogy
7. 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?
Appeal to Ignorance
Locus of Quality
Checking for Sign argument
Gorgias
8. Value Hierarchy Visualization
Metaphor
Hyperbole
Burden of proof
Term I/Term II
9. Taking the absence of evidence against something as justification for believing that thing is true.
Epistrophe
Anaphora
Analogy
Appeal to Ignorance
10. Taught by sophists; provides tools to recognize good arguments from bad ones
Exergasia
Cause 9Arguing that something caused something else)
Rhetoric
(Fallacy of) Accident
11. _____ rejected rhetoric as flattery - not truth - a 'knack' on par with 'cookery' and 'cosmetics'
Plato
Epistrophe
Cicero's Four Stasis Points
Analogy
12. Affirming or denying a point strongly by asking it as a question; also called a 'rhetorical question'
Division
Traditional Wisdom (Fallacy)
Erotema
Suppressed or Overlooked Evidence
13. Uses emotional appeal instead of evidence to argue
Value Hierarchies
Emotionally Charged (Language)
Correctio
Narrative
14. Puritan morality - change and progress - equality of opportunity - rejection of authority - achievement and success
Less Valued Term/Higher Valued Term
Blame
(Special Topoi for) American Public Address
Antithesis
15. Set two things in opposition
Checking for Testimony argument
Antithesis
Argument
Checking for Narrative argument
16. 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
Stasis
Unrepresentative Sample
Rhetoric
Shifting the Burden of Proof
17. Repetition of the same word or groups of words at the beginning of successive clauses - sentences - or lines.
Disassociation of Concepts
Anaphora
Ethos
Intelligence
18. Is the metaphor appropriate? The key to ____ is matching strategy to situation.
Non Sequitur
Rhetoric
Litotes
Decorum
19. The process of discrediting someone's argument by revealing weaknesses in it or presenting a counterargument
Commonplaces
Refutation
Formal Debate
Term II (Disassociation Pair)
20. Does one thing really cause the other - or are they merely correlated? Is there another larger cause or series of causes that better explains the effect?
(at the) Corax (and) Tisias trial
Traditional Wisdom (Fallacy)
Checking for Cause argement
Formal Logic
21. Who developed the argument from general probability?
Corax
Categorical (Syllogism)
Simile
Ambiguity
22. Does the argument effectively appeal to audience values and priorities? Does the argument accurately capture the values at play in this situation?
Analogy
Litotes
(Evaluation Criteria for) Value-Oriented Arguments
Correctio
23. 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:
Blame
Burden of proof
Conjectural (Stasis)
Modus Ponens
24. 'When a qualified person says something is true - it's true' is a warrant for what arg?
Litotes
Charisma
Testimony
Term I/Term II
25. Value Hierarchy Visualization in terms of high and low values (?/?)
Unequivocal
Unrepresentative Sample
Less Valued Term/Higher Valued Term
Conjectural (Stasis)
26. Arguing that the conclusion of an argument must be untrue because there is a fallacy in the reasoning. (Just because the premises may not be true - does not mean that the conclusion has to be false)
Fallacy Fallacy
Unrepresentative Sample
Checking for Narrative argument
Burden of proof
27. Usually has three parts: 1. (MP) Major Premise - unequivocal statement 2. (mP) Minor Premise - about a specific case 3. (C) Conclusion - follows necessarily from the premises
Invalid (Categorical Syllogism)
Syllogism
Qualitative (Stasis)
Checking for Analogy argument
28. What order do definitional and qualitative stasis usually fall into when put into an argument?
Consistency
Special Topoi
Second
Epistrophe
29. Beginning repeated
Cost
Tools of Refutation
Anaphora
Value-Oriented Arguments
30. Inference that allows you to move from grounds to claim (often implied in the argument)
Tisias
Disassociation of Concepts
Post hoc - ergo propter hoc
Warrant
31. Ask a rhetorical question
Erotema
Aristotle
Parallelism
Anaphora
32. Drawing an analogical conclusion when the cases compared are not relevantly alike
Antithesis
Disjunctive (Syllogism)
Manufactroversy
Questionable Analogy
33. The inference reasons from meaning or lesson of a story to a claim. The warrant usually says 'The moral to a story tells us a greater truth'
Parallelism
Rhetoric
(Argument of ) General probability
(Argument from) Narrative
34. Prolepsis - Direct Refutation - Conceding some points to focus on others - Agree on commonality then refute - and Turn are all examples of _____ ______
Disassociation of Concepts
Refutation Strategies
Sophist
Antithesis
35. Asks - 'of what kind is it?' Involves a question of the quality of the act - whether it is good or bad.
Qualitative (Stasis)
Division
Turn
First
36. Asks - 'is it?' Involves a question of fact (past - present - future)
Ad Populum
Isocrates
Burden of Rejoinder
Conjectural (Stasis)
37. Common practice and traditional wisdom fallacies are categories of _____
Parallelism
(Argument from) Narrative
Checking for Sign argument
Tu Quoque
38. Specific evidence or reason to support the claim (often introduced with the words 'because' or 'since')
Grounds (or data)
Isocrates
Sign
Arguments
39. Accepting a token gesture for something more substantive
Analogy
Litotes
Tokenism
Checking for Sign argument
40. The list that builds
Term I/Term II
Incrementum
Blame
Questionable Cause
41. Circular Reasoning
Ad Populum
Enthymeme
Hyperbole
Begging the Question
42. Arguing without evidence that a given event is the first of a series of steps that will inevitably lead to some outcome.
Exergasia
Slippery Slope (Fallacy)
False Charge of Fallacy
Procedural (Stasis)
43. Show that an opponent's argument actually supports your side of the debate (often accompanied by a flip in values)
Turn
Checking for Analogy argument
Formal Debate
Parallelism
44. What kind of commonplaces 'deflect reality'
Modus Tollens
Nonassociated (commonplaces)
Anadiplosis
Tu Quoque
45. Ideas repeated
Turn
Sign
Blame
Exergasia
46. A manufactured controversy that is motivated by profit or extreme ideology to intentionally create confusion in the public about an issue of scientific fact that is not in dispute by the scientific community. Used to stop debate at the conjectural le
Manufactroversy
Analogy
Quantitative (significance)
Sophist
47. 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
(Special Topoi for) Science
Small Sample
Exergasia
Fallacies
48. What order does conjectural stasis usually fall in when arguing?
Situationally flawed
Term I (Disassociation Pair)
First
Composition
49. Opposite of Epanalepsis
Anadiplosis
Checking for Cause argement
Checking for Sign argument
Hyperbole
50. The inference moves from specific to general or from general to specific. The warrant to this argument usually reads 'what is true in this case is true in general' or 'what is true in general is true in this case'
Situationally flawed
Shifting the Burden of Proof
Toulmin Model
(Argument by) Example