The definition of an analogical argument is an argument where a person concludes that two things have accepted similarities in certain aspects because they are alike in some other way. It is an argument that what is true of one thing is also true of the other thing.
A counter argument is an argument made against another argument.
an analogical statement is a statement that compares, or makes an analogy of, something and something else
Evidence to support the argument is needed for a sound argument.
The claim is the argument you plan to prove.
the invalid argument is argument which is not based on any justification to justify the argument. Whereas, unsound argument is based on little justification but does not fully match with the ground on which the argument is based
Analogical argument
property in question
Predictable ratios
property in question
Analogical Arguments
weak analogy
weak analogy
he Analogical Teleological Argument of Paley: If I stumbled on a stone and asked how it came to be there, it would be difficult to show that the answer, it has lain there forever is absurd. Yet this is not true if the stone were to be a watch.
yes
it is analogical
Car to a horse
examples of analogical reasoning