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Argumentation in Practice soargecennricny Seige Edited by Frans H. van Eemeren Peter Houtlosser i Volume 2 A is publication meets the minimum requirements tion Seiences~ Permanence Library Materials aNst 239.48- 1984, Library of Congress Cataloging Publication Data Table of contents List of contributors Introduction Frans H. van Bemeren and Peter Houtlosser |. Forms and conceptions of argumentation (Carrer | “The issue” in argumentation practice and theory Robert T. Craig and Karen Tracy Carrer 2 Hearing is believing: A perspective-dependent account ofthe fallacies Christopher W. Tindale Carrer 3 let's talk: Emotion and the pragm-dialectic model ‘Michael A. Gilbert Cunpren + Indicators of dissociation M.A. van Rees Capen 5 ‘A collaborative model of argument problem-solving interactions ‘Matthieu Quignard Carrer 6 ‘The argumentative dimension of discourse Ruth Amossy Carrer 7 Designing premises Jean Goodwin #8 69 Me Tableofcomtents ‘Table ofcontenss v4 Carrer 8 On the pragmatics of argumer Lit Bruton Cuarrer 9 From argument anal cH ‘The accusation of amalgame as a meta-argumentative refutation Mari ned) antagonist in advertising argumentation Richardson ing demands, multiple ideals and the structure of argumentation practices: pragi tical analysis of televised town hall meet wing the murder tral of O. J. Simpson Mark Aakhus Chapter 13 Arguments of vietims: A case study of the Timothy McVeigh trial Tom Fareell and Mark Lawrence McPhail Cuarren 16 ding of “Ellen's energy adventure” iam Balthrop and Carole Blair and civil society us 15 4s 163 a3 as Charren 18 ‘The use of arguments from perceived opposition in U.S terrorism Carol Winkler (Cuarren 19 How could oficial speakers communicate reasonably with their king? 305, Um Hoon of French provincial printers, 1669-1 = Jane McLeod and Hans V. Hansen (Cuapren 21 Inventional capacity 37 Dale Hample (Cuapren 22 ‘The conventional validity of the pragma-dialectical freedom rule M9 Frans H, van Eemeren, Bart Garssen and Bert Mewffels Index 367 Cuaprer 11 Constructing the (imagined) antagonist in advertising argumentation Albert Atkin and John E. Richardson ‘Sheffield 1, Introduction: The problem of the imagined antagonist

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