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Teaching Warrants to Help Students Think Critically about Claims and Evidence
by Ted Kinnaman, Chair, Philosophy
In academic studies of critical thinking, much attention is given to
the notion of a warrant. Teaching students to understand the use
of warrants in writing, no matter what the field, is important for
helping them to assess the evidence for the claims they make, and for
the claims by others that they study. When someone makes a claim
or assertion, we can ask them, ‘how did you get there?’ or ‘why do you
believe this?’ To cite a warrant is to answer this sort of question. It
is to offer some justification for the claim just made. But there are
many different sorts of claims and many sorts of warrant as well. Here are
some of the most important examples:
- Empirical claims:
- Empirical claims are claims about how
things are in the world (for example, that it is raining in Tennessee)
and the warrant for such a claim must be evidence about the
world. This might be an observation (I was just in Tennessee and
saw it raining), a report of an observation (I talked to my parents
in Nashville who said that it is raining), or a reference to a regular
connection among phenomena (There is a low pressure area over
the Southeast and that always causes rain in Tennessee).
- Scientific claims:
- Strictly speaking, scientific claims are
empirical claims, but they are distinguished from ordinary
empirical claims by the method by which they are supported.
The warrant for a scientific claim is grounded in the scientific
method: Why do you believe that smoking causes cancer? Because
this hypothesis has been carefully tested, the results formulated to
stay strictly within what the experiment supports, the conclusions
confirmed through testing by other researchers, and so on.
- Moral claims:
- Claims about what is right or wrong are
generally supported by appealing to broader moral principles
that have the particular claim as consequences. For example,
why do you think that the decision to drop the atomic bomb on
Hiroshima was immoral? Because the bombing killed innocent
people for no good overriding purpose, and killing innocent
people needlessly is always wrong. Note that in addition to the
moral principle, moral claims are often based in part on empirical
claims with which one can take issue as outlined above.
- Historical claims:
- Claims about historical events require
special sorts of warrants, citing evidence from historical sources.
Specifically, historical knowledge usually depends heavily on
testimonial evidence, such as contemporary accounts of events
and official records or archives, as well as reasoned interpretation
of such testimony by other historians. Why do you think that
the harsh terms of the Treaty of Versailles led to the rise of Hitler?
Because examination of German responses to Versailles show
their direct linkage to the rise of virulent nationalism in Germany
in the 1920’s.
- Pragmatic claims:
- The warrant for a claim about how
to accomplish a goal depends on knowing how things work in
the world. You should take the Metro to your interview in DC
instead of driving, because all the highways into the city are
crowded at that hour, and furthermore the stress of driving will
cause you to have difficulty focusing on the interview.
- Aesthetic claims:
- Sometimes claims about beauty or artistic
merit can be support by appealing to feelings (‘I love it!’) but more
often they are supported by appealing to criteria for success in a
particular area (Matisse’s The Dance is a great painting because of
the perfect balance in the composition) or to a general principle
about art or beauty (Citizen Kane is a great film because it makes
the viewer care deeply about the fate of Charles Foster Kane).
Of course, there are other possible categories, and the lines between
the categories are not as neat as presented here. But this is a valuable
exercise for students writing in all disciplines. When students
understand the concept of a warrant they are better able to make
reasoned judgments about whatever material they study, and express
these judgments in their written work.
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