Most recent writers of informal logic texts draw a distinction between "linked" and "convergent" arguments. According to its inventor, Stephen Thomas, the distinction is of the utmost importance; it "seems crucial to the analysis and evaluation of reasoning in natural language." I argue that the distinction has not been drawn in any way that makes it both clear and of any real originality or importance. Many formulations are obscure or conceptually incoherent. One formulation of the distinction does seem tolerably clear and I develop another, but neither promises to make it matter much. We can well do without it.
CITATION STYLE
Conway, D. A. (1991). On the Distinction between Convergent and Linked Arguments. Informal Logic, 13(3). https://doi.org/10.22329/il.v13i3.2564
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