[PLing] Research Talk / F. Macagno / “Preventing disagreements. The argumentative structure of common ground manipulation”

Thielemann, Nadine nadine.thielemann at wu.ac.at
Thu Nov 10 14:53:58 CET 2022


Dear colleagues,



we would like to invite you to a research talk by Fabrizio Macagno (Universidade Nova de Lisboa,Portugal).  His lecture “Preventing disagreements. The argumentative structure of common ground manipulation” will take place on 1st December at 16:15 in D2.2.228 (WU Campus). For an abstract, please see below.



Best wishes,



Nadine & Martina



Abstract

The disagreements between different parties on subject matters involving the public’s values and most uncritically accepted generalizations are normally described in philosophy and linguistics as “deep disagreements” (Fogelin, 2005). This label refers to a disagreement that cannot be rationally resolved, regardless of the evidence and acceptance thereof by the parties. However, how do deep disagreements develop? The analysis of discourses on heated topics shows how this inscrutable notion is in fact the result of argumentative strategies aimed at preventing a discussion on a specific topic, so that the actors involved do not need to acknowledge the weakness or higher acceptability (or probative force), of a position.  The analysis of discourse through the types of arguments used and the fallacies committed allows the detection of a phenomenon that lies beyond the concepts of truth and falsity – or mere false news – namely the manipulation of the common ground. Common ground is a linguistic and philosophical notion used to refer to the condition of a pragmatic presupposition: a proposition can be taken for granted when it belongs to or is not in conflict with and is retrievable from, the information that the interlocutor holds and accepts as non-controversial. By taking for granted information or evaluations that are not shared by (all) the interlocutors, the speaker is defining a common ground that has the features opposed to the ones that it needs to serve. The speaker is creating a ground that cannot be shared by a specific part of the audience, and thus limits and avoids the possibility of a dialogue – and even a disagreement. The types of fallacies and arguments allow for detecting of different ways in which the common ground is (or can be) manipulated, bringing to light distinct strategies and possible effects.

Fabrizio Macagno is an auxiliary professor of philosophy at the Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal, where he teaches courses of Strategic Argumentation, Teaching philosophy, and Rhetoric of advertising. He is conducting research in the field of Argumentation and Philosophy of Language, which applies to Education, Medical communication, and Legal interpretation.


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Univ. Prof. Dr. Nadine Thielemann

Head of
Institute for Slavic Languages
Department of Foreign Language Business Communication

WU - Vienna University of Economics and Business
Welthandelsplatz 1, Gebäude D2, Eingang D, Büro 3.194
1020 Wien/Vienna, Austria

Tel.:   +43-1-31336-5427
Fax:   +43-1-31336-907044
e-mail: nadine.thielemann at wu.ac.at<mailto:nadine.thielemann at wu.ac.at>
homepage: https://research.wu.ac.at/de/persons/nadine-thielemann-8
academia: http://wuvienna.academia.edu/NadineThielemann

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