9 Planning and Creating Your Reasoning
Although, in practice, reasoning, knowledge, research, and analysis are all
inextricably bound together, it is also true that, from time to time, we divide
our reasoning tasks up in a way that allows us to sit down and prepare an
analytical text containing arguments and explanations. What we have learnt
about reasoning so far makes us much more effective in such preparation,
and this chapter briefly discusses two ways in which we can go about it.
However, always remember that the key to good reasoning is not a 'method'
or program of steps to follow but an attitude—a keenness to think things
through. The advice that follows is designed principally to 'jog' your mind
into this sort of keenness and should be applied judiciously, on the basis of
the particular skills and needs that apply to you as an individual smart
thinker.
In this chapter:
1 We will consider some of the key questions that can help us determine
the external context in which our argument or explanation fits. Then,
revisiting the planning method from chapter 3, we will look at the
questions that are most useful in guiding the reasoning in the text we
are preparing.
2 We conclude with a short example of the way that the analytical struc-
ture format can be used, not to represent our entire argument and
explanation, but instead as a 'plan' of ideas and relationships that can
then be used to assist in actually writing the narrative flow of our
reasoning.
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