Saturday, November 20, 2010

Week 14-Post 3: The Normal Conditions

In Chapter 15, Epstein talks about "The Normal Conditions" and goes and relates to the example he gives of spot and dick. Epstein goes on and explain why the normal conditions are important to cause an argument or example to be valid or strong. According to Epstein, Normal Conditions are "for casual claim, the normal conditions are the obvious and plausible unstated claims that are needed to establish that the relationship between purported cause and purported effect is valid or strong" (303). Epstein uses the example about Dick and Spot to show how the concept of normal conditions is use and the example is:

"Dick was sleeping soundly up to the time that Spot barked.
Spot barked at 3 a.m.
Dick doesn't normally wake up at 3 a.m.
Spot was close to where Dick was sleeping.
There was no other loud noise at the time...." (303).

Epstein explains that its important to leave or exclude the obvious and normally we assume that things are the "normally" just like that. For instance in the example above, Dick normally doesn't wake up wake up at 3 a.m. and we need to assume that things are normally like this that Dick never tends to wake up at 3 a.m. but this time he did. This concept was just interesting to me and made sense when Eptein conclude the normal conditions in his example of Dick and Spot.

1 comment:

  1. I also talked about the normal conditions for my blog post. I thought this part in the chapter was very useful because some things should be left out in an argument. If an argument is explained with excessive details, it tends to get confusing. Certain things are common sense, therefore it is important to exclude what is apparent to make the claims more plausible. There is no need to redundant and stating the obvious is not necessary. I liked the example the book used because it gave me a better understanding of what normal conditions are and how it should be used.

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