Proposal

Rohits333
CounterargumentTemplate.docx

Professor Siegel

Organizing a Counterargument

Counterarguing is a high risk, high reward strategy in argumentation. A strong counterargument can successfully demonstrate why an alternative is wrong, however, a weak one can leave your argument open to attack. Remember that you can’t just burn down the alternative; you also have to salt the earth so that nothing ever grows there again.

Address the opposition/alternative

· This is your topic sentence

· Clearly express the subject and content of the paragraph

· Make sure key terms (and people) are defined

Some phrases/transitions to consider:

· According to…, Popular opinion/belief states that..., While many people/experts agree/argue…

Segue/transition into stating that this is wrong and lead into why

· Express that the argument is incomplete, weak, or illogical

· Don’t just summarize their argument; respond to it

Some phrases/transitions to consider:

· However, nonetheless, despite this, on the contrary…

Provide specific examples to demonstrate

· Identify specific examples from their side, then use evidence from your side and state why they are wrong or fallacious

· Use your argumentation strategies to demonstrate why they are wrong: Aristotelian appeals, prognostication, agitate-and-solve, etc…

Some phrases/transitions to consider:

· Rather, yet, instead, but, nevertheless, still, regardless…

Close by stating your position and why it is stronger

· This is your concluding sentence

· Summarize and link back to the thesis/your position

Some phrases/transitions to consider:

· Therefore, so, in conclusion, to sum up…