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Introduction: Show Me
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the Arguments
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Michael Bruce and Steven Barbone
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β We are going to ruin undergraduate philosophy. β That was what we told
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our friends and teachers when we pitched the idea of this book to them. It
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was our experience that for almost any given philosophy class that we took
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as undergraduates, there were only a handful of arguments, totaling no
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more than a few pages of carefully crafted notes, that we needed to know.
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We imagined a rolodex of arguments in front of us, which we could spin
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through with ease to fi nd the argument and move on. Midterm or fi nal
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examinations in one of these classes would be reduced to presenting a philosopher
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β s argument, followed by a critique β usually another philosopher β s
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argument. The ability to state an argument clearly and concisely, in a term
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paper, for example, demonstrates that one succinctly understands the material.
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The following arguments can be viewed as answers to such test questions
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and also to some of life β s questions as well.
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β Show me the argument β is the battle cry for philosophers. Everyone
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has subjective personal experiences, sentiments, and opinions, so philosophy
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appeals to the common ground of reason to evaluate claims objectively.
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Logical reasoning is independent of political and religious commitments.
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Put simply, an argument is valid or it is not. (Whether or not it is convincing
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is another issue.) When one analyzes a position in terms of its argument,
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one responds with a certain level of rigor and attention. Uncompelling
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arguments can be dismissed out of hand as absurd and forgotten; however,
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arguments that evoke strong reactions, often due to the potential consequences
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of the argument, are countered by a restatement of the initial
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argument, explicitly displaying the inferences, assumptions, and justifi cations
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and why the conclusions do not follow. When things become serious,
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one wants just the arguments .
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Just the Arguments: 100 of the Most Important Arguments in Western Philosophy,
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First Edition. Edited by Michael Bruce and Steven Barbone.
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Β© 2011 Blackwell Publishing Ltd. Published 2011 by Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
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2 Michael Bruce and Steven Barbone
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The time has long passed when it was possible for one to read the entire
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Western philosophical canon. Philosophy needs new didactic tools to
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address the fact that the quantity of infl uential arguments will increase while
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the number of hours that a student at any level has will remain relatively
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the same. Philosophy as a formal discipline will increasingly need to β get
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smart β about how it selects which arguments deserve more attention than
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others in the classroom and then how to teach them. Outside of the classroom,
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there are little - to - no resources that function as study guides. Detailed
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study guides are made for everything β the Bible, calculus, grammar, biology
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β except for philosophy. There are laminated sheets in bookstores that list
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all the standard mathematical equations, sheets that have common Spanish
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verbs, and even one on β Golf for Women, β but not one has arguments on
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the existence of God, free will, or moral responsibility. Many books present
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important philosophical arguments, but it is often the case that these books
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outline only a single argument or a string of related arguments. Encyclopedias
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of philosophy are great for limited descriptions of philosophers and concepts,
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but there is a need for reference tools that offer specifi c arguments.
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In the end, these secondary sources often bury the argument in commentary
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and analysis and do not lend themselves to concise and effi cient referencing.
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It can take just as long to fi nd an argument in the analysis as it would to
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go to the original text. This volume acts as a compact and accessible companion
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to both sources.
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It deserves to be underscored that this volume showcases 100 of the most
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important arguments and that this list is not exhaustive or uncontroversial.
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This is the fi rst project of its kind. There are not standardized accounts of
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arguments that are univocally accepted in the fi eld. Experts in every fi eld
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disagree β perhaps even more so in philosophy. Arguments that are valued
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now may not be considered to be as equally important in the future. Even
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when there is an agreement that an argument is important, it can be far
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from clear how the argument goes or what the correct conclusion is.
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Authors in this volume have selected representative quotations in support
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of their versions of the arguments. The following arguments are not ranked
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against each other as more or less important. Aquinas β Five Ways should
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not be considered more important than other arguments based on the fact
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that it comes fi rst. There are many more, important arguments that are not
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included here, and we hope to provide these in forthcoming installments.
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We have selected arguments that an undergraduate philosophy major
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would be likely to encounter, though many of the issues arise in general
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education classes outside of philosophy. A majority of the arguments employ
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intuitive logical inferences, allowing readers without formal training in logic
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to follow the argument. The inference rule used to draw each conclusion is
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named to enable the reader to see explicitly the argument β s valid structure.
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We provide an overview of the inferences in the appendices. There are a
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Introduction: Show Me the Arguments 3
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few arguments that require a more advanced understanding of logic, and
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readers will benefi t from the introduction and commentary that provide the
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general strategy.
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This volume is divided into six parts: philosophy of religion, metaphysics,
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epistemology, ethics, philosophy of mind, and philosophies of science
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and language. There are more branches of philosophy than there are sections
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in the volume, and there are other important arguments within the
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given domains than those presented here. It is common that arguments in
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one area are also important and infl uence arguments in another. Many
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arguments could have been included in multiple sections. These divisions
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are provisional, and arguments will reference related arguments in the book,
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signaled by β # β and then the number of the argument. The bibliographic
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information in each article will also be instructive for further reading. The
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following are introductions to the arguments in the form of the questions
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that they address. In other words, we provide the questions that would
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naturally lead one to the argument. For example, β Is change real (#14)? β
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directs readers to the article β Parmenides β Refutation of Change, β argument
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#14.
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Philosophy of Religion
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What were Aquinas β β Five Ways β to prove the existence of God (#1)? Must
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there be at least one self - existent being that explains why there is something
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rather than nothing (#2)? If something begins to exist, then does it have a
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cause (#3)? If God is something than which nothing greater can be thought,
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