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Course Content

  • Seminal concepts of Linguistics and Language Philosophy that we need.
  • How rational are we, humans? Rationality and rationalization
  • Definitions of truth, the criteria of critical thinking
  • Formal and informal fallacies, cognitive biases and their evolutionary roots
  • Classifications of cognitive biases (focus: research-related and political biases)
  • Preconscious/Unintended errors versus consciously applied biases (manipulation)
  • Speaker/Writer-side versus Listener/Reader-side biases
  • Manipulative appeals to Ethos, Logos, and Pathos (speech analysis)
  • The border between persuasion and manipulation (was Habermas an idealist?)
  • The slippery slope from unintended distortions over mild manipulation to blatant war propaganda - manipulation as a symptom of political decay

 

Key Skills

  • Analyzing argumentations for formal and informal fallacies
  • Identifying and debunking manipulative attempts
  • Naming recognized fallacies and cognitive biases
  • Writing a short persuasive but non-manipulative policy brief
  • Minimizing fallacies and subconscious biases in own writing

 

Course Progression

  1. Theoretical framework (4–5 lessons)
  2. Interactive and individual exercises, learning and applying the terms of text analysis (4-5 lessons)
  3. Term-end Writing: writing and submitting a persuasive but non-manipulative debate brief / opinion essay on a political issue dealt with in another IUfU course (home assignment) 
  4. Evaluation (1 lesson)

 

Participants are required to

  • Attend at least 75% of contact lessons (sessions build on each other);
  • Complete at least 75% of home assignments (Quizlet, learning = doing);
  • Submit and orally defend their policy brief.

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