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    Cogency requires that premises be acceptable, relevant, a... — Carmelics
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    Supports→Adopting cogency as an argumentative ideal draws informal logic toward an epistemic conception of fallacies rather than a purely logical one.

    Cogency requires that premises be acceptable, relevant, and sufficient — not merely that the inference be valid.

    Philosophy of LanguageTruth & Knowledge
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    Adopting cogency as an argumentative ideal draws informal logic toward an episte...Fallacies with problematic premises reflect a concern with argument evaluation b...

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    The adoption of the concept of a cogent argument as an ideal has several consequences. The category of fallacies with problematic premises (reminiscent of Whately’s “premises unduly assumed”) shows a concern with argument evaluation over and beyond logical or inference evaluation, drawing the informal logic approach away from purely logical concerns towards an epistemic conception of fallacies. Having both sufficiency and relevance as criteria (instead of the single validity criterion) has the b

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