Introduction: Reasoning for Change

Informal Logic 30 (3) (2010)
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Abstract

This special issue of Informal Logic brings together two important areas of philosophy that have shown significant development in the last three decades: informal logic and feminist philosophy. A significant innovation they both share is new thinking about practices of argumentation and related practices of reasoning. Feminist theorizing supporting social and political change foregrounds “reasoning for change” in a way that draws attention to the contextual and rhetorical dimensions of argument and thus connects with significant developments in informal logic

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Author Profiles

Catherine Elisabeth Hundleby
University of Windsor
Phyllis Rooney
Oakland University

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The Four-Sentence Paper.Dennis Earl - 2015 - Teaching Philosophy 38 (1):49-76.

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