120 likes | 247 Views
Cause/Effect. Causal Arguments. We’re all familiar with causal arguments—we’ve been making them since we were very young. For instance:. Even if you’re unfamiliar with the Beatles (shame on you), I bet you can tell me what caused the Beatles to break up. Yoko Ono!.
E N D
Causal Arguments We’re all familiar with causal arguments—we’ve been making them since we were very young. For instance: Even if you’re unfamiliar with the Beatles (shame on you), I bet you can tell me what caused the Beatles to break up. . .
Yoko Ono! We All Still Blame Yoko . . . Why?
Why don’t we blame John Lennon? John and Yoko on the Dick Cavett Show
Or Paul McCartney? Paul actually filed a lawsuit to dissolve the Beatles in 1970.
There are many reasons for the Beatles’ breakup. Five minutes worth of research on Wikipedia would provide us with this conclusion: *Note that Yoko Ono is actually number four on this list.
Causal Arguments can be overly simplified . . . But if someone call pull apart your argument as quickly as we’ve just pulled apart the “Yoko Ono” one, you’ve got a problem. Quiz preview for next class: Chapter 12 discusses two fallacies common to causal arguments (p. 247). Explain which fallacy you believe could lead people to accept that Yoko Ono broke up the Beatles.
Cause and Effect One more example . . . Looking at the following picture, I want you to write down (briefly) what you believe to be the cause. Study the picture, then write for a minute or two about what caused the event. “I don’t know,” is not an acceptable answer.
The Wreck of the Herald of Free Enterprise. The Herald of Free Enterprise was a British ferry, operating in the English Channel (this was before the “chunnel” was opened). On March 6, 1987, the ferry capsized killing 193 people. It was the worst maritime disaster for the British since the sinking of the Titanic. But why? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jz2jpLO-bYw
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Herald_of_Free_Enterprise_WBG.pnghttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Herald_of_Free_Enterprise_WBG.png
Looking forward . . . For this unit, we’re going to be interested in making causal arguments. But as we do, let’s keep in mind that most events aren’t caused by one thing alone. Causes and effects are rooted in complexity. Academic arguments that aim to present and convince an audience of a cause (or causes) need to do justice to the complexity of the issue, or they risk failing altogether.