Saturday, October 23, 2010

Vague Generalities

Vague generalities are when we discuss a part or even all of a group without specifying the precise number (Epstein). An example of this would be when you say all Camaros are fast, almost all Camaros are fast, and a few Camaros are fast. Words like all we can figure out, if we have enough detail to go on. But words like few maybe to vague to be put into an argument. They may not be generalized enough to be said in your argument because we cannot tell if just a few Camaros are fast is a valid statement of not. These words make it so the argument is too vague and unbelievable so it is not valid. You can usually make these arguments stronger by specifying the statement so the audience can understand it this will make your premise better and your argument stronger. Vague statements can weaken your argument and make it more difficult to understand, but if you specify then you can make your argument stronger as a whole.

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