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The Routledge Handbook of Argumentation Theory offers 43 chapters--written specifically for this volume by a team of leading, international scholars--that survey a wide spectrum of research on the nature, purpose, and promise of argument and the associated practice of argumentation. Each chapter provides up-to-date research tools and statements designed to help readers understand and engage with the field's main ideas and problems as they are studied and practiced today. The book is split into two parts: * Part One covers orienting approaches in argumentation studies. * Part Two focuses on the…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The Routledge Handbook of Argumentation Theory offers 43 chapters--written specifically for this volume by a team of leading, international scholars--that survey a wide spectrum of research on the nature, purpose, and promise of argument and the associated practice of argumentation. Each chapter provides up-to-date research tools and statements designed to help readers understand and engage with the field's main ideas and problems as they are studied and practiced today. The book is split into two parts: * Part One covers orienting approaches in argumentation studies. * Part Two focuses on the main debates in argumentation theory. The Handbook illustrates how different disciplines contribute to argumentation theory, integrating contributions from logic, epistemology, social psychology, political science, communication, rhetoric, and other fields. This volume thus provides researchers and students with a picture of the diversity and depth to the work in argumentation theory today. Throughout, it clarifies complex questions and methods in this evolving field of study. And references at the end of chapter and a comprehensive index at the back of the book provide readers with central resources for further work in this important area of research.
Autorenporträt
Scott Aikin is an Associate Professor of Philosophy at Vanderbilt University, USA. He specializes in epistemology, argumentation theory, and ancient philosophy. He is the author of Epistemology and the Regress Problem (2011) and Straw Man Arguments, with John Casey (2022). John Casey is a Professor of Philosophy at Northeastern Illinois University in Chicago, Illinois, USA. He specializes in the history of medieval philosophy and argumentation theory. He is the author of Straw Man Arguments (in 2022 with Scott Aikin), among other articles on argumentative adversariality, autonomy, informal fallacies, and meta-argument. Katharina Stevens is an Associate Professor of Philosophy and an Argumentation Theorist working at the University of Lethbridge in Alberta, Canada. She is a co-editor of the journal Informal Logic and a co-director of the University of Lethbridge's Critical Thinking and Citizen Engagement Lab. She publishes on Argumentation Theory, especially the Ethics of Argumentation and Precedent. She is also the author of The Ethics of Argumentation (online first, 2026), Routledge