Table of Contents
Guide to Readings 
Preface
 Chapter 1 Thinking and Writing–A Critical Connection
 Thinking Made Visible 
 Critical Thinking 2
  An Open Mind–Examining Your World View
  Hedgehogs and Foxes
 Writing as a Process
  Invention Strategies–Generating Ideas
  The First Draft 
  The Time to be Critical
 Audience and Purpose
  E-Mail and Text Messaging
 Writing Assignment 1 Considering Your Audience and Purpose
 Reason, Intuition, Imagination, and Metaphor
 Reasoning by Analogy
 Summary
 Key Terms
  
 Chapter 2 Inference–Critical Thought
 What Is an Inference?
  How Reliable is an Inference?
 What Is a Fact?
  Reliability of Facts in a Changing World
 What Is a Judgment?
 Achieving a Balance Between Inference and Facts
  Facts Only
  Inferences Only
 Writing Assignment 2 Reconstructing the Lost Tribe
 Reading Critically
 Making Inferences–Writing about Fiction
 Writing Assignment 3 Interpreting Fiction
 Making Inferences–Analyzing Images
  Persuading With Visual Images
  Examining Ads
  Vivid Warnings
  Visual Images and the Law
 Summary
 Key Terms
  
 Chapter 3 The Structure of Argument
 Premises and Conclusions
 Distinguishing Between Premises and Conclusions
 Standard Form
 Writing Assignment 5 Creating a Political Handout
 Ambiguous Argument Structure
 Hidden Assumptions in Argument
  Dangers of Hidden Assumptions
  Hidden Assumptions and Standard Form
  Hidden Assumptions and Audience Awareness
 Summaries
  Strategies For Writing a Summary
  An Example of a Summary
 Writing Assignment 5 Summarizing an Article
 Argument and Explanation–Distinctions
 Summary
 Key Terms
  
 Chapter 4 Written Argument
 Focusing Your Topic
  The Issue
  The Question at Issue
  The Thesis
 Shaping a Written Argument–Rhetorical Strategies
  The Introduction
  The Development of Your Argument
  How Many Premises Should an Argument Have?
  The Conclusion
 A Dialectical Approach to Argument
  Addressing Counterarguments
  How Much Counterargument?
  Refutation and Concession
  Rogerian Strategy
  When There is No Other Side
 Logical Connections–Coherence
  Joining Words
  More On Coherence
 Sample Essays
 A Two-Step Process for Writing a Complete Argument
 Writing Assignment 6 Arguing Both Sides of an Issue
 Writing Assignment 7 Taking a Stand
 Summary
 Key Terms
  
 Chapter 5 The Language of Argument–Definition
 Definition and Perception
  Who Controls the Definitions?
  Defining Ourselves
  Shifting Definitions
  Definition: The Social Sciences and Government
 Language: An Abstract System of Symbols
  The Importance of Concrete Examples
  Abstractions and Evasion
  Euphemism and Connotation
 Definition in Written Argument
  Appositives–A Strategy for Defining Terms Within the Sentence
  Appositives and Argument
  Punctuation of Appositives
  Extended Definition
 Writing Assignment 8 Composing an Argument Based on a Definition
 Inventing a New Word to Fill a Need
 Writing Assignment 9 Creating a New Word
 Summary
 Key Terms
  
 Chapter 6 Fallacious Arguments
 What Is a Fallacious Argument? 
  Appeal to Authority 
  Appeal to Fear 
  Appeal to Pity 
  Begging the Question 
  Double Standard 
  Equivocation 
  False Analogy 
  False Cause 
  False Dilemma 
  Hasty Generalization 
  Personal Attack 
  Poisoning the Well 
  Red Herring 
  Slippery Slope 
  Straw Man 
 Writing Assignment 10 Analyzing an Extended Argument 
 Key Terms 
  
 Chapter 7 Deductive and Inductive Argument
 Key Distinction
  (1) Necessity Versus Probability
  (2) From General to Specific, Specific to General
 The Relationship Between Induction and Deduction
 Deductive Reasoning
  Class Logic
  Relationships Between Classes
  Class Logic And The Syllogism
 Hypothetical Arguments 168
  The Valid Hypothetical Argument
  The Invalid Hypothetical Argument
  Necessary and Sufficient Conditions
  Hypothetical Chains
  Hypothetical Claims and Everyday Reasoning
 Inductive Reasoning
  Generalization
  The Direction of Inductive Reasoning
  Testing Inductive Generalizations
  Thinking Critically About Surveys and Statistics
 Writing Assignment 11 Questioning Generalizations
 Writing Assignment 12 Conducting a Survey: A Collaborative Project
 Summary
 Key Terms
  
 Chapter 8 The Language of Argument–Style
 Parallelism
  The Structure of Parallelism
  Logic of the Parallel Series
  Emphasizing Ideas With Parallelism
 Sharpening Sentences, Eliminating Wordiness
  Concrete Subjects
  Active and Passive Verbs
  Passive Verbs and Evasion
  When the Passive is Appropriate
  Consistent Sentence Subjects
 Summary
 Key Terms
  
 A Quick Guide to Evaluating Sources and Integrating Research into your Own Writing
 Where to Begin
 Evaluating Online Sources
 Checking for Bias
 Three Options for Including Research
 Blend Quotations and Paraphrases into Your Own Writing
  Make the Purpose Clear
 Punctuation and Format of Quotations 
 Omitting Words From a Direct Quotation–Ellipsis
 Plagiarism
 A Final Note
  
 Additional Readings
 “Living with Less,” Graham Hill
 “The Conservative Case for Gay Marriage,” Ted Olsen
 “You Are What You Speak,” Guy Deutscher
 “The Order of Things,” Malcolm Gladwell 
 Text Credits
 Index