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This Concept Map, created with IHMC CmapTools, has information related to: ArgSchemes Overview, if a road-pricing scheme saved London from traffic collapse, then a road-pricing scheme would save Atlanta from traffic collapse therefore (ArgScheme: modus ponens) a road-pricing scheme would save Atlanta from traffic collapse, this does not matter much, because any objection against the enabler will teach us some- thing, and can be used to revise the argument accordingly. Follow the link below for examples coments on 2. the enabler of such an argument is usually hard to defend, what is true for the four ravens I saw is true for all ravens therefore (ArgScheme: complete induction) all ravens are black, a road-pricing scheme saved London from traffic collapse both these arguments are logically equivalent a road-pricing scheme would save Atlanta from traffic collapse, If r, then q therefore (ArgScheme: conditional syllogism) If r, then p, If someone is a rational human being, then this person is responsible for what he or she does therefore (ArgScheme: modus ponens) Paul is responsible for what he did, Dr Brown claims p therefore (ArgScheme: perfect authority) p, if p then r therefore (ArgScheme: constructive dilemma) either s or r (but maybe both), not p therefore (ArgScheme: disjunctive syllogism) q, Dr Brown claims p therefore (ArgScheme: modus ponens) p, If the ball drops, the lever will turn to the right therefore (ArgScheme: conditional syllogism) If the ball drops, the engine will stop, If all the ravens I saw in all my life were black, then all ravens are black therefore (ArgScheme: modus ponens) all ravens are black, not q therefore (ArgScheme: modus tollens) not p, either Donna knew the infor- mation on her tax returns were wrong or she did not know therefore (ArgScheme: constructive dilemma) either Donna was lying, or she was negligent, It cannot be the case, at the same time, that p and q therefore (ArgScheme: not-both syllogism) it is not the case that p, If the lever turns to the right, the engine will stop therefore (ArgScheme: conditional syllogism) If the ball drops, the engine will stop, if Dr Brown claims p, then p therefore (ArgScheme: modus ponens) p, either p or q therefore (ArgScheme: either way) r, either Joan or Ann rows the boat therefore (ArgScheme: disjunctive syllogism) Ann rows the boat, the action of a force is the necessary and sufficient condition to accelerate a body therefore (ArgScheme: equivalence) this body is accelerating