Difference between revisions of "Structured debate/rules"
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m (moved Issuepedia:Structured Debate/rules/addenda to Issuepedia:Structured Debate/v2009: naming versions by date instead of by capability, so the progression is clearer; also lets us include the terminology along with the rules) |
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Revision as of 15:37, 7 March 2010
This version of the rules allows for "informal" points and "bundling". It also uses slightly different terminology.
- Every argument starts with a target claim which asserts as fact the subject of the debate.
- Any claim may be answered by zero or more response claims
- Each response claim must relate to the target claim in one of the following ways:
- Support: an argument that the parent claim is true
- Counter: an argument that the parent claim is false
- Informal (or "informational"): information which neither supports nor contradicts the parent claim but helps narrow or guide the discussion in some way
- Any response claim may also be viewed as a target claim, and the rules for target claims (given above) apply without modification
- Any claim may either be standalone or bundled:
- A standalone claim remains active as long as it has at least one active supporting claim
- A bundled claim remains active only as long as all of its supporting claims remain active
- Any claim which has no active counterclaims is described as "active" and possibly true
- Any claim which has at least one active counterclaim is described as "inactive" and presumed to be false
- A response claim may require a chain of reasoning in support; in this case:
- each link of the chain becomes its own claim, subject to the same rules as any other claim
- failure (deactivation) of any one of the links in the chain invalidates (deactivates) the claim (normal claims remain active as long as any one supporting claim remains active)
For example, a claim may have several counterclaims, but if they have all been countered as well, then the main claim remains active and will be considered true.