“Reasonable Hostility”: Its Usefulness and Limitation as a Norm for Public Hearings

Informal Logic 31 (3):171-190 (2011)
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Abstract

“Reasonable hostility” is a norm of communicative conduct initially developed by studying public exchanges in education governance meetings in local U.S. communities. In this paper I consider the norm’s usefulness for and applicability to a U.S. state-level public hearing about a bill to legalize civil unions. Following an explication of reasonable hostility and grounded practical theory, the approach to inquiry that guides my work, I de-scribe Hawaii’s 2009, 18-hour pub-lic hearing and analyze selected segments of it. I show that this par-ticular public hearing raised de-mands for testifiers on the anti-civil union side of the argument that rea-sonable hostility does not do a good job of addressing. Development of a norm of communication conduct for this practice, as well as others, must engage with the culture and time-specific beliefs that a society holds, beliefs that will shape not only how to argue but what may be argued and what must be assumed about particular categories of persons

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The Uses of Argument.Stephen E. Toulmin - 1958 - Philosophy 34 (130):244-245.
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Question-reply argumentation.Douglas Neil Walton - 1989 - New York: Greenwood Press.
Norms of Legitimate Dissensus.Christian Kock - 2007 - Informal Logic 27 (2):179-196.

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