Argumentation theory, or argumentation, embraces the arts and sciences of civil debate,
dialogue, conversation, and persuasion. It studies rules of
inference,
logic, and procedural rules in both artificial and real world settings. Argumentation is concerned primarily with reaching conclusions through logical
reasoning, that is, claims based on
premises. Although including
debate and
negotiation which are concerned with reaching mutually acceptable conclusions, argumentation theory also encompasses the branch of social debate in which
victory over an opponent is the primary goal. This art and science is often the means by which people protect their beliefs or self-interests in rational dialogue, in common parlance, and during the process of arguing. Argumentation is used in
law, for example in trials, in preparing an argument to be presented to a court, and in testing the
validity of certain kinds of evidence. Also, argumentation scholars study the post hoc rationalizations by which organizational actors try to justify decisions they have made irrationally.
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