During a recent visit to China to give an invited lecture on legal argumentation I was asked a question about conventional opinion in western countries. If legal r- soning is thought to be important by those both inside and outside the legal prof- sion, why does there appear to be so little attention given to the study of legal logic? This was a hard question to answer. I had to admit there were no large or well-established centers of legal logic in North America that I could recommend as places to study. Going through customs in Vancouver, the customs officer asked what I had been doing in China. I told him I had been a speaker at a conf- ence. He asked what the conference was on. I told him legal logic. He asked 1 whether there was such a thing. He was trying to be funny, but I thought he had a good point. People will question whether there is such a thing as “legal logic”, and some recent very prominent trials give the question some backing in the common opinion. But having thought over the question of why so little attention appears to be given to legal logic as a mainstream subject in western countries, I think I now have an answer. The answer is that we have been looking in the wrong place.
Douglas N. Walton Bücher
Dieser Autor ist ein führender Gelehrter auf dem Gebiet der Argumentationstheorie und logischer Fehlschlüsse. Seine umfangreichen veröffentlichten Arbeiten befassen sich mit den Nuancen der Überzeugung und des kritischen Denkens. Waltons Theorien haben sich in Bereichen von der juristischen Argumentation bis zur Entwicklung künstlicher Intelligenz als unschätzbar erwiesen, was die breite Wirkung seiner Forschung belegt. Seine Arbeit inspiriert Studenten und Forscher weltweit und prägt zukünftige Diskurse in Logik und Rhetorik.


This is an introductory guide to the basic principles of constructing good arguments and criticizing bad ones. It is nontechnical in its approach, and is based on 150 key examples, each discussed and evaluated in clear, illustrative detail. The author explains how errors, fallacies, and other key failures of argument occur. He shows how correct uses of argument are based on sound argument strategies for reasoned persuasion and critical questions for responding. Among the many subjects covered are: techniques of posing, replying to, and criticizing questions, forms of valid argument, relevance, appeals to emotion, personal attack, uses and abuses of expert opinion, problems in deploying statistics, loaded terms, equivocation, and arguments from analogy.