Part six of a six-part series on critical reasoning. In this final lecture we will look at fallacies. These are bad arguments that can easily be mistaken for good arguments.
Part five of a six-part series on critical reasoning. In this lecture we will continue with the evaluation of arguments - this time deductive arguments - focusing in particular on the notion of validity.
Part four of a six-part series on critical reasoning. In this lecture we will learn how to evaluate arguments and how to tell whether an argument is good or bad, focusing specifically on inductive arguments.
Part three of a six-part series on critical reasoning. In this lecture we will focus on how to identify and analyse arguments, and how to set arguments out logic book-style to make them easier to evaluate.
The second of six lectures dealing with critical reasoning. In this lecture you will learn about the different types of arguments, in particular deductive and inductive arguments.
The first of six lectures dealing with critical reasoning. In this lecture you will learn how to recognise arguments and what the nature of an argument is.
joey mbugua
i really would appreciate hearing it clearly because I think the content is great
Harrison Sands
'The Oxford Guide to Effective Argument and Critical Thinking', outlines the concepts better with much more insight
Kevin Abraham
Total disregard for the fact that this is meant to be a podcast, not a video. The lecturer moves into and away from the mike. The learners ask questions that cannot be heard, and the lecturer points to sentences, presumably on a board, without reading them out. Gimme a break! Frustrating beyond words!