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What Are the Value and Descriptive Assumptions?

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Title: What Are the Value and Descriptive Assumptions?


1
What Are the Value and Descriptive Assumptions?
  • Asking the Right Questions
  • Chapter 6
  • (Chapters 5 and 6 in earlier editions)

2
Assumptions
  • In all arguments the writer will make
    assumptions. Assumptions can be
  • Hidden or unstated
  • Taken for granted.
  • Influential in determining the conclusion
  • Necessary, if the reasoning is to make sense
  • Potentially deceptive.

3
Watch Out
  • A reason can be true and not support the
    conclusion.
  • The government should require that ergonomically
    designed computer equipment and furniture be
    provided to workers. This will decrease the
    incidence of repetitive stress injury, eye
    strain, headache, and neck and back pain.

4
Makes Sense?
  • The argument makes sense if you believe that it
    is the responsibility of government to look after
    the welfare of the individual.
  • What if you believe that it is the individuals
    responsibility to take care of his own welfare?
    To provide for his own health and safety by
    demanding it from the employer or switching jobs
    if he cant handle it?

5
Value Assumptions
  • Values are ideas that people see as worthwhile .
    They provide standards of conduct by which we
    measure the quality of human behavior.
  • A persons value preferences influence the
    reasons he provides and the conclusion.

6
The Assumption is Necessary
  • The reasons will logically support the
    conclusion only if the value assumption is added
    to the reasoning.

Reason Online gambling feeds addictions.
Value Assumption Public safety is more important
than freedom of choice.
Conclusion Online gambling should not
be legalized

7
Some Commonly Held Values(Youll see a bigger
list in the Assignment)
  • adventure ambition privacy
  • autonomy needs of the collective security
  • comfort individual responsibility tolerance
  • cooperation courage wisdom
  • creativity equality of condition rationality
  • equal opportunity excellence spontaneity
  • flexibility freedom of speech tradition
  • generosity harmony competition
  • honesty justice
  • novelty order
  • patriotism peace

8
Value Conflicts
  • People give different priorities to values
  • Should DNA information be kept in a national
    database for police departments to access?
  • Should schools and libraries be required to
    provide equal access to computers for the
    disabled?
  • Is Microsoft a monopoly that should be broken up
    because they have an unfair advantage as the
    producers of the Windows system software?

9
Conflicts
  • Should DNA information be kept in a national
    database for police departments to access?
  • Privacy vs. security
  • Should schools and libraries be required to
    provide equal access to computers for the
    disabled?
  • Equal opportunity vs. Individual Responsibility
  • Is Microsoft a monopoly that should be broken up
    because they have an unfair advantage as the
    producers of the Windows system software?
  • Competition vs. Fairness

10
Common Value Conflicts
  • Loyalty-Honesty
  • Competition-Cooperation
  • Freedom of Speech-Security
  • Equality-Individualism
  • Achievement-Learning
  • Security-Excitement
  • Generosity-Material success
  • Rationality-spontaneity
  • Tradition-novelty
  • Individual Responsibility-Collective
    Responsibility
  • Efficiency-Social stability

11
Common Value Conflicts
  • The same value conflicts surface in many
    different social controversies and are easy to
    identify
  • Individual freedom vs. respect for others
  • Should Nazi groups have web sites?

Public Safety vs. individual responsibility Should
watching TV while driving be illegal?
12
Similar Controversies
  • Many issues share important characteristics
  • Should face-recognition software be used in
    public places to identify terrorists?
  • Should the FBI be allowed to monitor e-mail
    messages?
  • Should information about child molesters be
    published on the internet (Megans Law)?
  • Can you identify a value conflict that exists in
    all of these?
  • Hint they all involve the government knowing
    things about you and doing things with the
    information.

13
Ethics
  • Ethics or morals are a stronger form of values
    that reflect right or wrong behavior, or good and
    evil. Is it stealing?
  • Your friend in the neighboring apartment cant
    afford to pay for broadband Internet access. Hes
    taking an online class and cant keep up with the
    work without it. He wants to run a cable out the
    window of your apartment to his so he can use
    yours.

14
Excuses or Rationalizations
  • When people violate their ethics or values, they
    often rationalize it with something like the
    following
  • The ends justify the means
  • Its not illegal
  • I did it for you
  • He did it to me first
  • Nobody got hurt
  • Everyone else does it
  • I didnt get any money for it
  • I deserve it

15
Descriptive (Reality) Assumptions
  • Unstated beliefs about the way the world IS or
    will BECOME.
  • (Value assumptions are how the world SHOULD be)
  • You will be happy with your Internet access if
    you sign up with Comcast. They are the worlds
    largest ISP with over 12 million subscribers.

16
What is being assumed?
  • Is biggest always the best?
  • Just because Comcast is the largest ISP in the
    world, does it mean that they will provide the
    best Internet service?
  • These kinds of assumptions are also called
    reality assumptions

17
Is the assumption reliable?
  • The argument holds together only because this
    assumption was made. Should you accept it?

Comcast is the largest ISP.
Number of subscribers indicates quality of
service.
You will be happy With Comcast

18
Both at once
  • Examine the following statement. Can you find
    both a value and a descriptive assumption?
  • Trials and executions should be televised-the
    public has the right to know whats going on in
    our courts. Information about the judicial system
    needs to be more widely disseminated.
  • From Becoming a Critical Thinker p. 66

19
The Value Assumption
  • Freedom of information is important
  • Trials and executions should be televised-the
    public has the right to know whats going on in
    our courts. Information about the judicial system
    needs to be more widely disseminated.

20
The Descriptive Assumption
  • Televising the trials and executions would inform
    the public about the judicial system.
  • Is this a valid assumption? Would people really
    watch trials and executions on TV?

21
Identifying Assumptions
  • Investigate the authors background
  • Use reverse role-playing. Take the opposite
    position.
  • Look for common value conflicts. There may be
    more than one.
  • Ask Why do the consequences of the authors
    position seem so important to him or her? Look
    for a gap between the reasons and conclusion.
  • Get more information about the issue or similar
    controversies.

22
Look at the Authors Background
  • A clue can come from the preferences usually held
    by a person like the writer. What interests does
    such a person naturally wish to protect?
  • doctor, politician, computer professional,
    marketer, college professor, student,
    longshoreman, etc.

23
An Example
  • During a recent dockworkers
  • labor action, the Los Angeles Times presented
    this conflict
  • ILWU wants to control data on shipping.
  • Shipping companies want the data to be on the
    Internet.
  • Value social stability (union jobs) vs.
    automation/efficiency

24
Consequences
  • Each position with respect to an issue leads to
    different consequences or outcomes. How desirable
    a consequence is depends on the writers or
    readers value preferences.
  • Anonymous digital cash should not go into
    widespread use because government control of cash
    stabilizes the economy.

25
Consequence Example
  • Digital cash is designed to be an electronic
    replacement for cash that is stored on your PC
    and spent on the Internet-without leaving a trail
    to its source.
  • The statement assumes that stability from
    government control of the monetary system is a
    more important consequence than the freedom of
    consumers to purchase goods anonymously (not
    using a credit card number).

26
Gap between Reasons and Conclusion
  • You look for assumptions because you want to
    judge how well the reasons support the
    conclusion. Ask
  • How do you get from the reason to the conclusion?
  • If the reason is true, what else must be true for
    the conclusion to follow?
  • Supposing the reason(s) were true, is there any
    way in which the conclusion nevertheless could be
    false?

27
Look for ideas that support reasons
  • A reason is presented with no clear support yet
    the believability of the reason depends on the
    acceptability of ideas that have been taken for
    granted. From http//www.osopinion.com/ Oct 7
  • In thumbing through the classifieds, it becomes
    apparent that despite the sagging economy, there
    is real demand for customer service reps. That's
    the good news. More disheartening, though, is
    that an alarming number of companies listed
    people skills and personality -- not computer
    skills -- as the most sought-after qualities for
    candidates. The last people you want as your
    first -- maybe your only -- customer touchpoint
    are personable dimwits who are working for you
    because they can't get jobs anywhere else.

28
The Idea?

Conclusion Companies should hire customer
service reps for technical skills, not people
skills. Reasons Candidates with people skills
are dimwits. Personable candidates cant get jobs
anywhere else. Customer service reps are the
customer touchpoint. Assumption Job seekers
with good personalities do not have computer
skills.
29
Identify with the opposition
  • First take the role of the writer. Crawl into his
    skin.
  • If you cant locate assumptions that way, reverse
    roles. Ask why anyone might disagree.

30
Are there other means of attaining the advantages?
  • A conclusion is often supported by reasons that
    indicate the various advantages of acting on the
    authors conclusion.
  • What if there are many ways to reach the same
    advantages?
  • An important assumption linking the reasons to
    the conclusion is that the BEST way to obtain the
    advantages is through the one advocated by the
    communicator.

31
Other Means?
  • Excerpt from
  • L.A. Schools Can Soda
  • Officials Ban Soda to Combat Student Weight
    Problem
  • By Louinn LotaThe Associated Press
  • An audience of about 100 people burst into
    applause as the ban was adopted after 2 ½ hours
    of debate Tuesday night. It will take effect in
    January 2004. Board member Julie Korenstein, who
    co-sponsored the measure, said it was needed to
    fight obesity among students.

32
A Student Reply
  • From
  • Press-Telegram, Sunday Forum, p. A21
  • Soda Ban
  • As a high school student and soda fanatic, I
    find the idea of banning sodas from campus
    useless. I realize that studies show most
    children are overweight or malnourished, but that
    doesnt have much to do with what they consume at
    school. It has much more to do with home cooking
    and lack of exercise. If they dont sell on
    campus, then students will buy the sodas outside
    of school.
  • Natalie Aleman
  • Long Beach

33
Incomplete Reasons
  • When you try to find assumptions you may locate a
    reason, because the reason has not been
    adequately established.
  • The government should restrict public access to
    information to protect the nation from
    terrorists.

34
Incomplete Reasons
  • Conclusion The government should restrict public
    access to information.
  • Reason It will protect the nation from
    terrorists.
  • This is an incomplete reason that needs to be
    supported by some evidence, not an assumption.

35
Your Own Writing and Speaking
  • You will make numerous assumptions.
  • Communication requires them.
  • You should
  • Acknowledge those assumptions
  • Provide a rationale for why you are making the
    assumptions
  • Try to locate the descriptive assumptions on the
    next 2 slides (answers follow)

36
Find Descriptive Assumptions
  • This is a receptionist position, so we need a
    mature woman for the job. It's important that our
    clients feel comfortable as soon as they walk in
    here.
  • You can't go to the party in that outfit.
    Everyone will think you're completely clueless
    about how to dress, and no one will want to been
    seen with you.
  • The death penalty is proof that we value revenge
    more than we value people. We should save and
    rehabilitate people rather than giving up on
    them.
  • Latoya is really successful-she's only 28 and
    she's making 170,000 a year.
  • There is good news in that rape is on the decline
    in this country-there are 20 fewer police
    reports this year than last year at this time.
  • The people in that city don't care about the
    homeless-their city council voted against
    contributing 2,000 to a county fund to help the
    homeless.
  • Drugs and prostitution should be legalized. They
    are legal in Amsterdam and they solve more
    problems than they cause.
  • From Becoming a Critical Thinker by Sherry
    Diestler.

37
Did you get it?
  • Clients only feel comfortable around mature women
    (ambiguous too, what does mature mean?)
  • The speaker knows how everyone will respond to
    the outfit or everyone at the party judges you by
    your clothing
  • People who favor the death penalty only want
    revenge or every criminal can be rehabilitated
  • Money is the measure of success
  • All rapes are reported.
  • Spending public money is the way to care for the
    homeless.
  • What worked in Amsterdam will work in the U.S.
  • You may have worded yours a little differently.

38
Descriptive Assumptions by the Jury?
  • ACQUITTAL OUTRAGES WOMEN Jury Blames Provocative
    Miniskirt for AssaultBrian Murphy, Associated
    Press
  • LAUDERDALE, FLA-Sexual assault counselors and
    women's groups reacted with anger and disbelief
    Thursday to a jury's acquittal of a rape suspect
    on the grounds that the woman wore a lace
    miniskirt without underwear.
  • "It's a fairly horrendous verdict," said Ellen
    Vargyas at the National Women's Law Center in
    Washington, D.C. "No one, regardless of how they
    are dressed, should be allowed to be raped under
    a knife."
  • The three male and three female Broward Circuit
    Court jurors publicly justified their verdict
    Wednesday to acquit a 26-year-old drifter, who
    then was ordered returned to Georgia to face
    several other rape and assault charges.
  • "We felt she asked for it by the way she was
    dressed," said jury foreman Roy Diamond. "The way
    she was dressed with that skirt, you could see
    everything she had. She was advertising for sex."
  • "She was obviously dressed for a good time, but
    we felt she may have bit off more than she could
    chew," said juror Mary Bradshaw.
  • The 22-year-old woman testified that Steven Lord
    abducted her at knifepoint from a Fort Lauderdale
    restaurant parking lot in November 1988 and raped
    her repeatedly during a trip north on Interstate
    95. She said she escaped five hours later.
  • Defense attorney Tim Day told jurors the woman
    agreed to have sex with Lord in exchange for 100
    and cocaine, but later changed her mind.
  • Jurors said they also were swayed by the woman's
    calm demeanor in court, compared to the emotional
    testimony of a 24-year-old Georgia woman who
    claims Lord raped her at knife-point last year.
  • "When the Georgia woman testified, my heart
    sank," said juror Dan Medeiros. "But when the
    other one testified, she didn't appear to be
    shaken up. Basically, we didn't believe the
    story.
  • ..."The whole idea that a woman is asking for it
    is horrendous," said Dorothea Gallagher of the
    National Organization for Women's Broward County
    chapter.

39
The Jury Assumed
  • Women who wear seductive clothing are advertising
    for sex.
  • Once a woman agrees to sex its too late to
    change her mind.
  • A calm, unemotional witness is not believable.
  • End of Lecture
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