Hist150c6 Announcements, Fall 2016

 

 

8/25  For today's first projection on basics of argumentation, click here. For a projection, a statement on Martin Luther King's birthday, click hereFor a projection on logical definitions, click hereFor a projection on cogent reasoning, click hereFor a projection, on deductive and inductive reasoning, click here. For a projection on hidden premises, click hereFor a projection, an exercise on recognizing arguments, click here. For a projection, a New York Times article on Russia, click here. For a projection, on recognizing arguments and their components, click here.

8/30  For the first projection, an exercise on argument structure, click here. For the second projection, on four types of deductive arguments, click here. For the third projection, on deductive invalidity, click here. For the fourth projection, on types of inductive reasoning, click here. For the fifth projection, on appeal to authority, click here. For the sixth projection, on courtroom standards of evidence, click here. For the seventh projection, an exercise on valid and invalid appeals to authority, click here. For the eighth projection, Smedley Butler's speech on U.S. intervention, click here.   

9/1    For the first projection, a letter to the Financial Timesclick here. For the second projection, a list of fallacies, click here. For the third projection, on the straw-man fallacy, click here. For the fourth projection, on tautology, click here.  For the fifth projection, a speech by Abraham Lincoln, click here.

9/6    For today's projection, on the Korean war, click here. For an exercise on fallacies, click here. For the article "The Unkindest Cut," click here. For a letter to the Wildcat, click here. For controversies regarding the CIA, click here.

9/8    For the Economist obituary for Joan Rivers, click hereFor another exercise on rules of evidence, click here. For two videos on Russia's military capability, click here and hereFor a second list of fallacies, click hereFor the fallacy of the beard, click here. For the Ad Hominem fallacy, click here. For the slippery slope fallacy, click hereFor a projection on the two-wrongs-make-a-right fallacy from Israeli television, click here.

9/13   For an exercise on fallacies, click here. For a projection, an argument regarding aid to poor countries, click here. For a speech by President Eisenhower, click here. For an exercise on the Fallacy of Composition with regard to economics, click hereFor a projection on the Fallacy of Whitewash, click here.

9/14    Regarding the Fallacy Ad Baculum, click here. A display of logic from The Donald, click hereVideo about logic and witches, click here. The video represented as a syllogism, click here. Video on the annoying peasant, click here. A third list of fallacies, click here. For an argument regarding the California recall election, click here. For an example of questionable use of public opinion polls, click here. For a projection on the Democrats' economic stimulus legislation, click here.

9/20  For the Erica Jong article on the election, click here. For an exercise on fallacies, click hereFor a newspaper article on Vladimir Putin, click here. For an exchange between Donald Trump and Marco Rubio, click here. For an article about pharmaceutical companies, click here. On 2016 campaign slogans, click hereFor a complete list of fallacies, click here.

9/27   For a clip from the Clinton-Trump debate, click here. For a transcript, click hereFor a comparison of fallacies, click here. For an article on climate change, click here

9/29    On confirmation bias, click here. "Name that Fallacy," click here. For an article on Hillary Clinton, click here. For an article on nuclear weapons, click here.

Week of 10/10  Timeline for 1991 Gulf War, click hereLink to video on propaganda pertaining to the First Gulf War, click hereFor a link to a documentary on war propaganda by the Canadian Broadcasing Corporation, click here.

10/18    For a projection on atrocities, click here. For a projection on manipulative language and propaganda, click hereFor a video on fine print disclaimers, click hereFor an exercise regarding manipulative uses of language, click here. For a speech by President George W. Bush on September 7, 2003, click here. For a list of words used by President Bush, click here.

For a list of available history classes for Spring 2017, click here

10/20   For a projection on reliable sources of information, click here. To find out which UA database you need to use in order to search for articles in these publications, click hereFor a projection on rules for writing papers, click here. For a projection on students' writing mistakes, click here For the essay, "What are the Connections between Al Qaeda and Saddam Hussein?" click hereFor a guide on how to cite, click here.

Midterm II

Hist 150c6
Handed Out: October 20, 2016
Due: November 8

Select an opinion article from the New York Times or another reliable newspaper on any current political topic from the past five years. Write a 3-5 page, double-spaced paper that analyses the argument, noting the argument’s main theme; the premises and evidence presented to support the theme; and the logical fallacies or uses of manipulative language (if any). Above all, I would like you to evaluate whether the argument is persuasive and valid, according to the rules of logic. Your paper should summarize the main points of the article, so that I and my teaching assistants will understand the content. 

Suggestion: You can look for articles by specific New York Times columnists including Paul Krugman, Maureen Dowd, Nicolas Kristof, Roger Cohen, Thomas Friedman, Gail Collins, or David Brooks (here is the link to the Times website). Or you can use articles by other writers or from other publications if you prefer.

You should then do some of your own research, regarding the opinion piece you are evaluating. Find an additional three (or more) articles pertaining to the subject, in order to check the facts and more fully to evaluate the writer’s argument; and also to see whether the writer has omitted or glossed over important evidence that contradicts his or her thesis. When citing your sources, make sure to use proper footnote style.

Use ProQuest Newstand or some other database to locate the article you will analyze, as well as additional materials to support your analysis. Make sure to attach copies of the first page of each article you cite in your own paper.

Please hand your papers in class on November 8; late papers will be dropped one full grade. You will be graded on how well you analyze the article in question; how well you apply the rules of logic and argumentation; how thoroughly you research the topic; and how clearly you write your essay.

You must properly cite all referenced sources in your paper.

10/25   For a video on obfuscation, click here For the projection on inaccuracy in newspapers, click here. For the document on Operation Northwoods, click here. For a projection on Occam's Razor, click here.

10/27    Here is a video regarding the 2008 war in Georgia, click here  (what is the fallacy here?). For a projection on how to interpret controversy in the newspapers, click here. For the projection on inaccuracy in newspapers, click hereFor the a study regarding press misinformation, click here.  

11/3    For a list of names pertaining to the USSR and Stalin, click here

Image of Stalin as all-powerful, click here. For doctored photos of Trotsky, click here. Child-spy Pavlik Morozov, click here. Image of capitalism, click here. Images of capitalist USA, click here. Need for secrecy,click here. Women's liberation, click here. Collectivization, click here. For Soviet WW2 era propaganda films, click herehere, and here.

11/8    For a New York Times article on the Syrian civil war, click here.

11/22  For a list of names pertaining to Afghanistan, click here

11/29  Note that the third midterm will take place as scheduled, Thursday December 1. It will be an in-class essay based exam. The teaching assistants will host a review to take place Wednesday evening, November 30, 6:30pm, in the Library Instruction Room, Library 112A, which is in the basement near the Information Commons and the ILC.

12/6   You will write another 3-5 page paper analyzing a newspaper oped article, exactly in the same way as you have already done for the second midterm, according to the instructions noted above. You will be required to write a wholly new paper, on a different oped from the one you selected for the midterm. You will need to turn in the completed final paper to my mailbox in Social Sciences 215 or under my door in Social Sciences 227, by 5:00pm, December 12. You will turn in the paper itself; copies of the first page of each source used in the paper, all stapled together. In addition, please turn in a copy of your graded second midterm, to ensure that students do not try to recycle their previous class papers for the final. If you decide to complete this optional assignment, it will count for 40 percent of your final grade.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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