What kinds of arguments do people make, and what effect do they have on others? Normative constraints on argument-making are as old as philosophy itself, but little is known about the diversity of arguments made in practice. We use NLP tools to extract patterns of argument-making from the Reddit site "Change My View" (r/CMV). This reveals six distinct argument patterns: not just the familiar deductive and inductive forms, but also arguments about definitions, relevance, possibility and cause, and personal experience. Data from r/CMV also reveal differences in efficacy: personal experience and, to a lesser extent, arguments about causation and examples, are most likely to shift a person's view, while arguments about relevance are the least. Finally, our methods reveal a gradient of argument-making preferences among users: a two-axis model, of "personal--impersonal" and "concrete--abstract", can account for nearly 80% of the strategy variance between individuals.
翻译:人们会提出什么论点,他们会对其他人产生什么影响?对争论的规范限制与哲学本身一样老,但实际中争论的多样性却鲜为人知。我们使用NLP工具从Reddit网站“改变我的观点”(r/CMV)中提取争论模式。这揭示了六种截然不同的争论模式:不仅是熟悉的推论和感化形式,而且还有定义、相关性、可能性和原因以及个人经验的争论。来自 r/CMV的数据也揭示了效力的差异:个人经验,在较小程度上,关于因果关系和实例的争论,最有可能改变一个人的观点,而关于相关性的争论则最少。最后,我们的方法揭示了用户之间争论偏好程度的梯度:一种双轴模型,即“人-人”和“concrete-abstrictre”,可以解释个人之间战略差异的近80%。