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Decision Making Strategy

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Communications
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ashford university
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Running head: ARGUMENTS 1 Arguments Student’s Name Institutional Affiliation Date ARGUMENTS 2 Part 1: Nature of Arguments An argument refers to a statement that gives reasons and evidence to a particular conclusion. Arguments define the stand and opinion of an individual either in a discussion or a conversation based on a particular topic. An argument must have a premise and a conclusion based on the speaker's opinion. Some indicators of arguments are. Therefore, we can conclude, because, given that, since, and assuming that is included in a statement. An example of an argument can be "Since the school did not provide the fee statement, we can conclude that the leaders are corrupt." Cogent reasoning refers to the arguments based on true premises such as opinions and statistical facts. In cogent reasoning, the argument focuses on supporting a specific opinion with less concluding tone. Cogent reasoning is achieved through three ways that are termed as criteria for the argument. The first states that all premise is true, which gives the reason to accept the argument. The second states that all the relevant information is included making it a good argument with strong evidence (Stephens, Dunn, & Hayes,2018). The last criteria focus on the logical validity of the statement, which makes it easy for the reader or listener to accept. The three criteria of cogent reasoning aid in convincing the reader and listener. The two main types of arguments are deductive valid and induc ...
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