The Effect of Imprecise Expressions in Argumentation-Theory and Experimental Results
(2012) 2nd International Conference on Alternative Methods of Argumentation in Law (ARGUMENTATION 2012) p.15-30- Abstract
- We investigate argumentation where an expression is substituted with a less precise expression. We propose that the effect that this deprecization has on the audience be called deprecization effect. When the audience agrees more with the less precise version of the argument, there is a positive deprecization effect. We conducted an experiment where the participants were presented with a court room scenario. The results of the experiment confirm the following hypothesis: If the participants find it hard to agree with the precise version of the argument and accept the use of the imprecise term, they will agree more with the imprecise version of the argument. Furthermore, we show that a person who reacts in this way to deprecization commits... (More)
- We investigate argumentation where an expression is substituted with a less precise expression. We propose that the effect that this deprecization has on the audience be called deprecization effect. When the audience agrees more with the less precise version of the argument, there is a positive deprecization effect. We conducted an experiment where the participants were presented with a court room scenario. The results of the experiment confirm the following hypothesis: If the participants find it hard to agree with the precise version of the argument and accept the use of the imprecise term, they will agree more with the imprecise version of the argument. Furthermore, we show that a person who reacts in this way to deprecization commits the fallacy of equivocation. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/3932372
- author
- Dahlman, Christian LU ; Sarwar, Farhan LU ; Bååth, Rasmus LU ; Wahlberg, Lena LU and Sikström, Sverker LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2012
- type
- Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- Deprecization, vagueness, ambiguity, fallacy of equivocation, experimental philosophy
- host publication
- ARGUMENTATION 2012: International Conference on Alternative Methods of Argumentation in Law
- pages
- 15 - 30
- publisher
- Masaryk University
- conference name
- 2nd International Conference on Alternative Methods of Argumentation in Law (ARGUMENTATION 2012)
- conference location
- Brno, Czech Republic
- conference dates
- 2012-10-26
- external identifiers
-
- wos:000319230700003
- ISBN
- 978-80-210-5948-1
- project
- Law, Evidence and Cognition
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 679c2a68-3b23-4d40-a25b-83cccd90fea5 (old id 3932372)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-04 11:33:44
- date last changed
- 2022-09-14 15:52:53
@inproceedings{679c2a68-3b23-4d40-a25b-83cccd90fea5, abstract = {{We investigate argumentation where an expression is substituted with a less precise expression. We propose that the effect that this deprecization has on the audience be called deprecization effect. When the audience agrees more with the less precise version of the argument, there is a positive deprecization effect. We conducted an experiment where the participants were presented with a court room scenario. The results of the experiment confirm the following hypothesis: If the participants find it hard to agree with the precise version of the argument and accept the use of the imprecise term, they will agree more with the imprecise version of the argument. Furthermore, we show that a person who reacts in this way to deprecization commits the fallacy of equivocation.}}, author = {{Dahlman, Christian and Sarwar, Farhan and Bååth, Rasmus and Wahlberg, Lena and Sikström, Sverker}}, booktitle = {{ARGUMENTATION 2012: International Conference on Alternative Methods of Argumentation in Law}}, isbn = {{978-80-210-5948-1}}, keywords = {{Deprecization; vagueness; ambiguity; fallacy of equivocation; experimental philosophy}}, language = {{eng}}, pages = {{15--30}}, publisher = {{Masaryk University}}, title = {{The Effect of Imprecise Expressions in Argumentation-Theory and Experimental Results}}, year = {{2012}}, }