- Write a sentence properly
using “you and I”
- and another sentence
properly using “you and me”
- Separate out your 11
flashcards for this week’s prefix test:
- This week’s 11 prefixes
are..dict ………therm
- What’s the difference
between an argument and a contradiction?
- Video
4. Take notes:
- Premise:
a reason offered as support for another claim
- Conclusion: the claim being supported by a premise or premises
- Argument: a conclusion together with the premises that support it
i.
All men are mortal.
ii.
Socrates was a man.
iii.
Therefore Socrates is mortal.
- Consider the following argument:
- You spilled it. Whoever makes the mess clean up the mess.
i.
What is clearly implied
here is the conclusion: You clean up the mess.
- Now consider the following
argument:
- You should not eat that greasy hamburger. It is loaded with fat.
i.
Again, something is
implied, but this time, what’s implied is a premise: You should not eat
anything that is loaded with fat.
- Finally, it is important to remember that sometimes arguments can
have more than one conclusion. Look at the following argument:
- Since yesterday’s editorial cartoon succeeded in making the mayor look silly, the cartoonist must have finally regained his touch. And the mayor probably won’t be reelected.
i.
This argument can be
thought of as having two different arguments in it. We can analyze it in the
following way:
1.
Premise: Yesterday’s
editorial cartoon succeeded in making the mayor look silly.
2.
Conclusion: The
cartoonist has finally regained his touch.
a.
And
3.
Premise: Yesterday’s
editorial cartoon succeeded in making the mayor look silly.
4.
Conclusion: The mayor
probably won’t be reelected.
- Name that conclusion!!
- Go to Lab 140 and write up
a paragraph about texting that includes:
- A conclusion (about
texting)
- A premise (reason):
“Because….”
- Include a quotation from
the NYTIMES texting article
- Refer back to the same quotation in your paragraph
ENGLISH homework:
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