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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. Understatement
Charisma
Good Moral Character
Enthymeme
Litotes
2. 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:
Metaphor
Erotema
Stasis
Blame
3. After this - therefore on account of this
Conceding Arguments
Checking for Sign argument
Post Hoc Ergo Propter Hoc
Anaphora
4. Accepting an argument that you should believe something is true just because the majority believes it is true.
Gorgias
Ad Hominem
Ad Populum
Debate Resolutions
5. What is 'at issue' in a controversy; the place where two sides of an argument come into conflict; the clash between arguments.
Claim
Informal Debate
Stasis
Toulmin Model
6. Opposite of Epanalepsis
Anadiplosis
Questionable Cause
Appeal to Authority
Special Topoi
7. Is necessary to defend the weak against the strong - Is useful and necessary to the state and the individual because you become a more thoughtful citizen and a more well-rounded person - Is useful to have the tools to recognize good arguments and def
Corax
Rhetoric
Consistency
Cliche
8. Accepting a token gesture for something more substantive
Structural (inherency)
Tokenism
Enthymeme
Denying the Antecedent (INVALID)
9. Ammending a term or phrase you have just read
Hyperbole
Correctio
Begging the Question
Parallelism
10. Prolepsis - Direct Refutation - Conceding some points to focus on others - Agree on commonality then refute - and Turn are all examples of _____ ______
Modus Ponens
Refutation Strategies
Special Topoi
Claim
11. If A then B B Therefore - A
Litotes
Value-Oriented Arguments
Affirming the Consequent (INVALID)
Blame
12. An argument that follows proper logical form
Debate Resolutions
Questionable Cause
Valid
Example
13. 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
Loci of the Preferable
Qualitative (Stasis)
Anaphora
Structural (inherency)
14. Taking the absence of evidence against something as justification for believing that thing is true.
Conceding Arguments
Cure
Appeal to Ignorance
Gorgias
15. _______ in ancient Greece spurred the need for the use of rhetoric in everyday life.
Anaphora
Popular Democracy
Corax
Rhetoric
16. Common practice and traditional wisdom fallacies are categories of _____
Erotema
Loci of the Preferable
Tokenism
Tu Quoque
17. Values what is at the core or essence of a group (or class) rather than what is at the margins
Erotema
Composition
Emotionally Charged (Language)
Locus of Essence
18. An implicit comparison made by referring to one thing as another
Metaphor
Invalid (Categorical Syllogism)
Turn
Procedural (Stasis)
19. Oral performances that have a set format in which two or more speakers take turns making arguments and counterarguments before an audience - Examples: Court room - candidate debates - academic debates
Hyperbole
Ill
Parallelism
Formal Debate
20. Who developed the argument from general probability?
Epanalepsis
Corax
Direct Refutation
Cliche
21. Deliberate correction
Cause 9Arguing that something caused something else)
Honesty - Dedication - Courage
Correctio
Sound
22. Are there associated commonplaces for this metaphor that can be turned against the arguer?
Plato
Qualitative (Stasis)
Refutation Potential
Less Valued Term/Higher Valued Term
23. What order does conjectural stasis usually fall in when arguing?
First
Antithesis
Locus of Existence
Consistency
24. 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
Example
Traditional Wisdom (Fallacy)
Syllogism
Epistrophe
25. Exaggeration
Hyperbole
Special Topoi
Suppressed or Overlooked Evidence
Rhetoric
26. Arguing without evidence that a given event is the first of a series of steps that will inevitably lead to some outcome.
Denying the Antecedent (INVALID)
Slippery Slope (Fallacy)
Narrative
Epanalepsis
27. 'When a qualified person says something is true - it's true' is a warrant for what arg?
Emotionally Charged (Language)
Categorical (Syllogism)
Exergasia
Testimony
28. _____ said that concerning all things - there are two contradictory arguments that exist in opposition to one another.
Grounds (or data)
Tokenism
Protagoras
Locus of Essence
29. Opposite of Anaphora
Begging the Question
Epistrophe
Questionable Analogy
Procedural (Stasis)
30. The process of discrediting someone's argument by revealing weaknesses in it or presenting a counterargument
Appeal to Ignorance
(Fallacy of) Accident
Checking for Testimony argument
Refutation
31. Ideas repeated
Exergasia
Slippery Slope (Fallacy)
Ambiguity
Tisias
32. Specific evidence or reason to support the claim (often introduced with the words 'because' or 'since')
Invalid (Categorical Syllogism)
Status
Locus of Quantity
Grounds (or data)
33. All A are B -no B are C - therefore - no A are C
Less Valued Term/Higher Valued Term
Enthymeme
Stock Issues
Categorical (Syllogism)
34. 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.
Locus of Quantity
Tu Quoque
Unrepresentative Sample
Euphimism
35. Repetition of the same word or groups of words at the beginning of successive clauses - sentences - or lines.
Deductive Reasoning
Fallacy Fallacy
Associated Commonplaces
Anaphora
36. Ending of one repeated at the beginning of another
Rhetoric
Syllogism
Anadiplosis
False Dichotomy
37. Relative advantages and disadvantages of the new policy. Are the adverse effects going to outweigh the benefits?
Checking for Narrative argument
Epanalepsis
Cost
Suppressed or Overlooked Evidence
38. Taught by sophists; provides tools to recognize good arguments from bad ones
Appeal to Ignorance
Rhetoric
Parallelism
Gorgias
39. Value Hierarchy Visualization
Term I/Term II
Attitudinal (inherency)
Definitional (Stasis)
Cost
40. Agreeing to some of the arguments made by your opponents so that you can focus on others
Conceding Arguments
Anaphora
Sound
Simile
41. Letters to the editor - group discussions - talk show
First
Informal Debate
Toulmin Model
Refutation Strategies
42. Incorrectly assuming that what is true of the parts is true of the whole
(Argument from) Cause
Composition
Tu Quoque
(Special Topoi for) Republicans
43. A syllogism suppressing the Major Premise - and only contains a Minor Premise and the Conclusion. People speak in these more often than syllogisms.
Non Sequitur
Hasty Generalization
Enthymeme
(at the) Corax (and) Tisias trial
44. Metaphors use ____ and ____
Vehicle (and) Tenor
Burden of Rejoinder
Questionable Cause
Hasty Generalization
45. Incorrectly assuming that one choice or another must be made when other choices are available or when no choice must be made
Mixed Metaphor
False Dichotomy
Metaphor
Erotema
46. _____ rejected rhetoric as flattery - not truth - a 'knack' on par with 'cookery' and 'cosmetics'
Commonplaces
Correctio
Plato
Begging the Question
47. Agree with the values or goals of the opposition - but then argue that the opposition doesn't do a better job of achieving those values goals
Appeal to Ignorance
Agree on Commonality then refute
False Charge of Fallacy
Enthymeme
48. The inference moves from cause to effect or effect to cause - arguing that something is the direct result of something else. The warrant to this argument is usually formatted as: 'X is a form of Y'
Simile
Appeal to Ignorance
Term I (Disassociation Pair)
(Argument from) Cause
49. Concerns new policy being proposed that will remedy the ill outlined and the inherent factors.
Cliche
Straw Person
Affirming the Consequent (INVALID)
Cure
50. Similarity of structure in a pair or series of related words - phrases - or clauses
Checking for Testimony argument
Checking for Sign argument
Nonassociated (commonplaces)
Parallelism