Revista Electrónica 
  de Investigación Educativa
  
  Vol. 13, No. 2, 2011
  
  Argumentation: 
  A Forgotten Object 
  of Research in Mexico
  
  Luis Antonio Monzón Laurencio
  profesor.monzon@gmail.com
Universidad Autónoma 
  de la Ciudad de México
  Colegio de Humanidades y Ciencias Sociales
Prolongación 
  San Isidro 151
  Col. San Lorenzo Tezonco, 09790
  Iztapalapa, México
  
  (Received: December 5, 2010; accepted for publishing: May 6, 2011)
  
Abstract
  
  Since the beginnings of Western culture argumentation has been a fundamental 
  tool of thought and a component of university studies, which today are facing 
  many challenges; some of these areas of study require the development of this 
  skill. However, in Mexico, research on this subject is practically nonexistent. 
  This article briefly discusses state-of-the-art research on argumentation in 
  Latin America.
  
  Keywords: Argumentation, educational research, higher education, communication 
  skills.
  I. Introduction
  
  Since fourth century B.C. Greece—almost from the very beginnings of Western 
  culture as we know it—the practice of argumentation has formed part of 
  human education, not only, as stated by Nietzsche (1872/2000), as a complementary 
  part of it, but an essential one. “The instruction of ancient man usually 
  culminated in rhetoric: it is the supreme spiritual activity of a well-educated 
  political man—a very strange idea for us!”.
  
  Argumentation, as understood here and since the times of Aristotle and in classical 
  rhetoric, entails the ability to think and deliberate on particulars and contingencies, 
  as opposed to logical thinking which is concerned with the universal and the 
  necessary. Argument, from this perspective, is responsible not only for convincing 
  the intellect, but also for moving the emotions towards a cause (see Beuchot 
  1998, 2002, 2005, 2006; Beuchot and Arenas-Dolz, 2008, Ramírez, 2001, 
  2003, 2008, and Perelaman 1967, among others). Based on this point of view and 
  these authors, this is what we consider to be characteristic and valuable in 
  argument. For this reason the rhetorical way of thinking, i.e., argumentation, 
  was considered essential for the political and civic (moral) activity of humans, 
  because the objects of these activities are not necessary but contingent, debatable 
  and questionable. In contrast, the objects of science are regular and necessary 
  and in consequence are based on proofs and demonstration rather than on arguments, 
  and are, therefore, an indispensable part of the education of a citizen. 
  
  Consequently, from the time of ancient Greece and Rome through the Middle Ages, 
  rhetoric, as the theory and science of argumentation, was an important element 
  of education. The Sophists were responsible for this, leading to the inclusion 
  of rhetoric as part of the medieval trivium. 
  
  However, from the inception of the modern era, around the sixteenth or seventeenth 
  century, this way of thinking, rhetoric, began to disappear from the educational 
  system and the intellectual environment in general, displaced by the empirical 
  research and logical mathematical rationality that we could call “scientific 
  argument”, which proves but does not convince, is oriented only to reason 
  and deals with that which is regular and cannot be otherwise. 
  
  This model of rationality, which we can characterize—albeit not without 
  complications—as modern rationality, reached its apogee with the emergence 
  of positivism in the nineteenth century and, in the twentieth, logical positivism. 
  At that moment, the logic of proof, the search for universal laws and the use 
  of evidence in support of facts, reached its high point. Nevertheless, it has 
  been during these same centuries that the inadequateness of this “modern 
  rationality” for explaining the facts of social life has given rise to 
  various ways of building “new rationalities”. Thus ensued, for example, 
  the creation of epistemic logic (Hintikka), modal logic (Lewis and Langford), 
  quantum logic (Jauch), deontic logic (Von Wright), many-valued logic (Lukasiewicz) 
  and fuzzy logic (Zadeh), among others, which seek a broadening of modern rationality 
  in order to address more humanistic concerns, such as moral, educational, political 
  and legal issues.
  
  Among these approaches there are some that seek to recover and reformulate rationality, 
  and movements have emerged that attempt to revive the rhetorical thinking of 
  authors such as Perelman and Toulmin, who, at the same time and without ever 
  having met, both published books in 1958 on argumentation, reviving some theories 
  of classic rhetoric. This, coupled with the rehabilitation of hermeneutical 
  thinking carried out by Gadamer in the sixties, has generated an entire movement 
  focused on the recovery of rhetoric, culminating with authors of the caliber 
  of Beuchot (2002, 2005 and 2006), Arenas-Dolz (2008) and Ramírez (2001, 
  2003 and 2008), among others. 
  
  Studies on argumentation are quite ancient. The first to dedicate profound and 
  serious thought to it were the sophists in the 5th century B.C. Faced with a 
  democratic and plural Greece, these theorists (including Protagoras, Gorgias, 
  Hippias, Callicles and several others) represented a change in thinking similar 
  to that which postmodernism has effected since the last century: they moved 
  the field of theoretical speculation towards practical rationality; that is, 
  they ceased worrying about metaphysical concerns and problems of pure science 
  (natural philosophy) in order to deal once again with political, moral, religious, 
  educational and other issues.
  For centuries the term rhetoric referred to the art and science responsible 
  for carrying out research on argumentation. However, the term gradually lost 
  ground until it was limited to a small part of language studies that deals with 
  the ornaments of language or, alternatively, with the part of communication 
  studies that deals with the ways of persuading an opponent, independently of 
  the truth of the matter. Thus we speak of political rhetoric or advertising 
  rhetoric, among other derogatory uses of the term.
  Nonetheless, we must not forget the origin of rhetoric, its historical importance 
  and contemporary attempts to revive it.
II. Studies on Argumentation
  
  Currently, argumentation studies take many forms: there are the studies of Van 
  Eemeren, Grootendorst and Kruiger, in pragmadialectics; the theory of communicative 
  action of Habermas and Appel; Ducrot, Anscombe and Bakhtin’s theories 
  of argumentation in language; the studies of rhetoric linked to hermeneutics 
  in Ricoeur, Gadamer, Beuchot and Arenas-Dolz, among others; not to mention Michael 
  Billig’s rhetorical approaches in psychology and George Pólya’s 
  defense of heuristic thinking in mathematics.
  We can, therefore affirm that argumentation is currently an object of attention 
  in the field of philosophy.
  
  For the purposes of this article, Rhetoric is considered as referring to the 
  science that deals with the study of argumentation and we reintroduce a concept 
  of it based on the reflections of Beuchot (1998, 2002, 2005, 2006), and Ramírez 
  (2001, 2003, 2008) as well as Beuchot and Arenas-Dolz (2008), for whom rhetoric 
  possesses some noteworthy characteristics: 
 From this perspective, Rhetoric 
  is not merely a secondary discipline of linguistics, nor can it be considered 
  synonymous with empty or manipulative speech. Similarly, we consider it important 
  to make a distinction between Rhetoric as the art and science of argumentation 
  and rhetoric (in lower case) as the ability or capacity to deliberate on what 
  is appropriate in a given situation, i.e., the ability to argue.
  
  Consequently, we consider that the teaching of argumentation (rhetoric) is not 
  covered in science education (proof), although it is an essential skill to learn 
  or develop. In the literature we find several statements to this effect, including 
  that of Reygadas (2005):
Today, in times of absurd wars, of inventions that fail to measure their impact on the environment and on health, of deepening inequalities worldwide, it is a matter of some urgency to know how to argue—in all milieus--in favor of democracy, of the construction of a critical citizenry and of the survival of the world community (p. 4).
Similarly, educators such as Giry (2006) also note the need to learn to argue; Giry states that for new pedagogies:
The object of this method is not the acquisition of knowledge. These methods focus primarily on intellectual activities like learning to think, reflect, imagine, invent, or how to explain, argue and categorize (p.17).
Furthermore, Johnson (2003) says that “while accumulated knowledge may change, fade or become useless, the ability to think effectively remains constant” (p. 11), and this capacity to think not only concerns logical and mathematical thinking, but also, as we have maintained, hermeneutic and rhetorical thinking.
Finally, Beuchot and Arenas-Dolz (2008) point out that:
Rhetoric is a basic element of human instruction (…) we consider that the potential contained in the contributions of traditional rhetoric should be utilized in the education of the citizenry for whom current educational policies are designed (pp. 129-130).
More specifically, the 2009 curriculum for primary education in Mexico, in Chapter 5, Section 5.1 “Competencies for Life”, the second competency states:
Competencies for information management. These competencies are related to the search for information, and its identification, evaluation, selection and systematization; to thinking, reflecting, arguing and expressing critical judgments; to analyzing, synthesizing, utilizing and sharing information; to knowledge and the management of different logics of knowledge construction in different fields and different cultural contexts. (Secretaría de Educación Pública [Ministry of Public Education], 2009, p. 41).
Later, Section 5.2, “Profile of graduates of primary education”, states that “the student will, as a result of the educational process over the course of elementary and middle school, manifest the following characteristics”, with subparagraph b) specifying the following:
Use argument and reason to analyze situations, identify problems, formulate questions, pass judgment, propose solutions and make decisions. The student values the reasoning and evidence provided by others and can, in consequence, modify his or her own point of view (p. 43).
The same applies to the yearly programs, 
  in which argumentation or other similar dialogical skills (discussion, critical 
  thinking, etc.) appear as a constant.
  
  Given this scenario, we were curious as to what research has been done in Mexico 
  and Latin America on this subject.
  
  The aim of this article is to review the research in Latin America from 1980 
  to date (taking into consideration that it was in the 1970s that education began 
  to be considered a production-related good) on any topic related to argumentation, 
  its teaching as well as students’ level or quality of argumentation, among 
  other topics. Our purpose was to ascertain what has been achieved in this regard 
  and, thus, at the end of the paper, have the evidence to demonstrate the paucity 
  of such research in our country. 
  
  This review was conducted by consulting available electronic databases, mainly 
  Redalyc, Dialnet and Ebsco for articles and books; the dissertation database 
  of the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM 
  [National Autonomous University of Mexico]), which includes not only theses 
  and dissertations of that institution, but also those of others throughout the 
  country; the databases of libraries at other universities, such as Universidad 
  Pedagógica Nacional (UPN [National Pedagogical 
  University]), Universidad Autónoma de Aguascalientes (UAA 
  [Autonomous University of Aguascalientes]), Universidad Iberoamericana (UIA 
  [Iberian American University]) and Benemérita Universidad Autónoma 
  de Puebla (BUAP [Autonomous University of Puebla]), among 
  others.
  
  The review of these texts was carried out from a hermeneutical-rhetorical perspective. 
  Only some of the research papers were selected for this article, particularly 
  those that were considered most relevant or that refer to other research that 
  we were unable to locate.
  
  III. Research in the Latin American literature
  
  To begin with, we could mention some texts whose aim is to support the process 
  of teaching argumentation, such as Amestoy (1995), Procesos básicos 
  del pensamiento [Basic Thought Processes], or some of more recent appearance, 
  such as Ochoa (2008), Comunicación oral argumentativa [Oral 
  Argumentative Communication] or that of Jiménez (2010) 10 ideas clave: 
  argumentación y manejo de pruebas [10 Key Ideas: Argumentation and 
  Handling of Evidence]. It is important, however, to note that although these 
  documents may provide some pointers for teachers on how to teach, the theoretical 
  foundation underlying the texts is poorly developed—with the exception 
  of that of Ochoa, whose theoretical framework and analysis of the topic is quite 
  comprehensive—since they are, strictly speaking, manuals. It should be 
  noted that there are other manuals such as that of Weston (2005), which, because 
  they are not of Latin American or Spanish origin, are not considered here.
  
  Furthermore, some recent books have addressed the issue from the educational 
  perspective, for instance, that of Zubiría (2006), Las competencias 
  argumentativas: una visión desde la educación [Argumentative 
  Competencies: An Educational View]; Lanzadera, et al. (2007), Argumentación 
  y razonar: cómo enseñar y evaluar la capacidad de argumentar [Argumentation 
  and Reasoning: How to Teach and Evaluate the Capacity to Argue] and that of 
  Ochoa (2008), Comunicación oral argumentativa [Oral Argumentative 
  Communication]. In general, these works reflect on the role of argumentation 
  in education.
  
  Of these books, Ochoa’s stands out, given that it combines both research 
  and teaching recommendations; it includes a detailed analysis of the state of 
  the field in which several research papers related to argumentation are reviewed. 
  It should be pointed out that none of these papers were found in Mexican libraries 
  or on the Internet. Moreover, by means of the author’s summaries we were 
  able to apprehend that none of this research was conducted in Mexico.
  In terms of empirical research on this topic in the field of education, the 
  literature is also limited. We can affirm that few theses or dissertations (whether 
  undergraduate or graduate) are written on the subject in Mexico.
  
  For example, in the library, there are only eight theses dealing with subjects 
  related to rhetoric, two on argumentation and six on reasoning, all related 
  to logical mathematical reasoning, which, as was already mentioned, in our view 
  is different from rhetorical reasoning in addition to having a more limited 
  field of action.
  
  Meanwhile, a search of the UNAM database (which not only 
  contains theses and dissertations from the UNAM itself, 
  but also those of other associated universities) for theses with any term related 
  to argumentation yielded 81 results, of which none (either undergraduate or 
  graduate) pertained to the field of education, although some were from students 
  in the Master’s Program in Secondary Level Teaching (MaDEMS–acronym 
  in Spanish). Most of these theses dealt with the subject from a philosophical, 
  legal and linguistic perspective. Thus, there are theses on legal argument, 
  on the theory of argumentation in Aristotle, relativism and argumentation, scientific 
  argumentation and objectivity, etc. 
  
  Some theses, although not specific to the area of pedagogy, do take an approach 
  related to teaching and education, as in the case of Huerta (2009), a student 
  of MaDEMS, whose thesis is entitled Diagnostic of 
  student representations in written texts; construction of the other in students 
  of the Naucalpan Campus of the Colegio de Ciencias y Humanidades (CCH 
  [College of Science and Humanities, acronym in Spanish]: A didactic approach 
  for addressing argumentative text. Another is that of Cardona (2008): I knew 
  it when I was little: Argumentative discourse in two to four-year-old children, 
  a bachelor thesis in Hispanic Language and Literature.
  
  Other theses we encountered include that of Prian (2007), Didactics of argumentation: 
  Teaching argumentation in the Escuela Nacional Preparatoria [National High 
  School], who is also a student in the MaDEMS program, 
  and that of Cárdenas (2005), Patterns of argumentation in high school 
  students, a doctoral dissertation in Psychology.
  
  Lastly, also from the UNAM database, we should mention 
  the bachelor thesis of Pineda (2004), Methodological proposal for teaching 
  the writing of argumentative texts: A review of the Reading and Writing Workshop 
  II program in the Colegio de Bachilleres [Bachalaureate College] and that 
  of Peón, entitled Argumentative skills of elementary students and 
  their reinforcement, a doctoral dissertation in Psychology.
  
  Similar situations occur in other libraries in the country, many of which do 
  not have a single thesis on the subject.
  
  Despite having found the abovementioned papers, we can assert that research 
  on argumentation and education in Mexico is meager, though we have never contended 
  that it is nonexistent. The approaches on which these research papers are based 
  are quite varied, and in the majority of cases the theory of argumentation underpinning 
  the research is lacking in depth.
  
  As far as articles are concerned, there are several that could be mentioned. 
  In first place, in spite of being over fifteen years old, it is worth noting 
  that No. 26 of the journal CL & E: Comunicación, lenguaje y educación 
  [Communication, Language and Education], published in 1995 was devoted specifically 
  to the topic “Teaching argumentation”. It should be pointed out 
  that no other journal has been found that in like manner devotes an entire issue 
  to this subject.
  
  The abovementioned issue contains eight articles from different researchers, 
  among which the text by Dominique Guy Bassart (1995) stands out. Entitled “Elements 
  for teaching argumentation in elementary school”, the article defends 
  the position that students should be taught argumentation from an early age, 
  but above all, it highlights an important trend in the study of argumentation, 
  which is to consider it as text or discourse. Much of the research on the subject 
  addresses argumentation from this same perspective. María Josep Cuenca 
  (1995), for example, in an article in the same journal, points out that “argument 
  can also be considered a type of text or discourse” (p. 23), and while 
  this is not incorrect, when she states “argument, then, is recognized 
  as a type of text with certain characteristics that are distinguishable from 
  other types of text”, she appears to be unduly reducing what is implied 
  by the analysis and teaching of argumentation.
  
  Clearly argumentation represents a special type of text, as does a medical diagnosis 
  or an assembly diagram of a system for monitoring radiation in a nuclear reactor. 
  Nevertheless, what does not follow is that an individual’s ability to 
  argue can be adequately examined using only a linguistic analysis, just as we 
  cannot guarantee the competence of a physician or a nuclear engineer employing 
  only a linguistic approach to examine the above-mentioned texts, since someone 
  could conceivably “write” or “talk” like a physician 
  or an engineer without being one, without possessing the actual knowledge, skills 
  and attitudes pertaining to these professions. 
  
  From the theoretical perspective we are defending in this article, a linguistic 
  view of argumentation is insufficient because argument is not merely discourse, 
  it is reasoning, and a study of the underlying logic in speech that appears 
  to be argumentative is also necessary.
  
  Further, Cuenca (1995) states that “(…) it can be seen that argumentation 
  is a characteristic of human discourse, which is manifested by means of 
  specific linguistic and discursive markers” (p. 24, emphasis added). 
  Following this line of thought, it would appear that a simple analysis of how 
  a text is written would be sufficient to affirm that it is an argumentative 
  text. Nonetheless, as previously mentioned, this would be insufficient, since 
  the analysis of these marks does not imply that a person is actually arguing. 
  One can use inferential and premise indicators as well as examples, analogies, 
  etc, and not necessarily be arguing. 
  
  These discursive markers are indicators or indices (in terms of Peirce) that 
  make us suppose that there is an actual underlying argument, but in order to 
  determine if this is the case, an interpretive act is required: the discourse 
  must be interpreted in order to ascertain whether there is argumentation behind 
  it or not. It is, then, a hermeneutic problem, not just a matter of linguistics 
  or discourse analysis (although, occasionally, for example in Ducrot, the function 
  of discourse analysis has been defined as the interpretation of linguistic productions, 
  and in that sense it resembles hermeneutics).
  
  Continuing with our review, Sánchez and Álvarez’ (1999) 
  paper, Argumentative Discourse of Venezuelan Schoolchildren, based 
  on a study of 800 texts, seeks to determine the level of Venezuelan students’ 
  argumentation. These texts, which the authors expressly requested from the students, 
  were then collected and the different types of argumentation occurring in them—covering 
  a wide range of possibilities, from texts that merely express opinions to those 
  that are justified based on arguments of social impact—were compared. 
  The results of their research suggest that the students do not know how to argue 
  well.
  
  Another paper we encountered, A Socioepistomological View of Arguments in 
  the Classroom: A Case of Proving by Means of Reductio Ad Absurdum, from 
  Crespo and Farfán (2005), studies the abovementioned process of carrying 
  an argument to its absurd extreme as a “recourse for the validation of 
  results in mathematics” (p. 287). Among the study’s findings, what 
  we found striking was that the process of reductio ad absurdum is used by some 
  students as a resource in the classroom, although most do not use it in arguing 
  outside of it.
  
  Meanwhile, other studies that were reviewed, such as that of Arriassecq and 
  Iracheta (2006), Analysis of Argumentative Skills Developed by High School 
  Students in Physics Class and Henao and Stipcich’s (2008) Science 
  Education and Argumentation, also explore students’ ability to argue. 
  Both articles, however, refer to logical mathematical argument (proof) rather 
  than to rhetorical argumentation.
  
  Ortega de Hocevar (2007), for her part, in The Genesis of Argumentation, 
  expresses concern for research in this area as well as its discouraging findings: 
  “Many are the researchers who have maintained that students from all academic 
  levels have little development of written argumentative skills, both in comprehension 
  and production”. She refers to eleven research papers on the subject, 
  of which, again, interestingly, none were found in libraries in Mexico City 
  or on the Internet, nor were any carried out in Mexico, being mostly Argentinean 
  or Chilean, with the remainder coming from France, Colombia and Venezuela.
  
  Furthermore, Bentancur Espiñeira (2009), in The Development of Argumentative 
  Skills, also mentions research such as that of Peronard, dating from 1992, 
  and Núñez Lagos in 1999—among others not cited by Ortega 
  de Hocevar—all of which are more than ten years old and none from Mexico. 
  With these, we have now encountered mention of more than fifteen studies, of 
  which none were conducted in Mexico.
  
  Similarly, Tarabay and León have published two articles based on their 
  research, one in 2004 titled “Argumentation in Classroom Teaching” 
  and the other, “Argumentation as a Form of Communication in the Discourse 
  of the University Professor”, from 2007. Both seek to investigate the 
  argumentative strategies used by teachers in the classroom. The second of these 
  employs Habermas’ theory of communicative action to understand argumentation 
  as a specific type of communicative interaction through which the teacher engages 
  with students, given that, essentially, in the social sciences, unlike the natural 
  sciences, teachers do not seek to prove what they claim, but to achieve students’ 
  espousal of the arguments they propose. The findings lead one to reflect on 
  how the relationship that the teacher establishes with the students determines, 
  in some way, whether or not they learn how to argue. In classroom teaching, 
  for example, as the author observes, argumentation is employed through authority, 
  both the teacher’s as well as that of experts, which does not motivate 
  a discussion of ideas. Despite the fact that this research is quite interesting, 
  we note, once again, that it was not conducted in this country, but in Venezuela. 
  
  
  Lastly, some articles published in Brazil by Selma Leitao titled Processos 
  de construção do conhecimento: a argumentação em 
  foco [Processes of Knowledge Construction: Argumentation in Focus] are 
  noteworthy since their appropriation of the theory of Bakhtin, a philosopher 
  of the Russian language from the early 1900s, is interesting, in contrast to 
  the widespread use of Toulmin, Van Eemeren and Ducrot in the rest of the research 
  we encountered.
  
  IV. Conclusions
  
  In general we can argue that the amount of research conducted in Mexico on the 
  subject of argumentation is, indeed, very paltry compared with that of other 
  countries such as Colombia and Venezuela. Similarly, it seems pertinent to point 
  out that most of the research that has been found so far (including the studies 
  that we were unable to include in this article) focuses on the primary and secondary 
  educational levels, leaving aside the study of argumentation at the undergraduate 
  and graduate levels, which, in a way, is where it is essential to possess a 
  good command of argumentation.
  
  A troubling fact is that most of the research that was consulted concluded that 
  students’ level of argumentation ranged from poor to nonexistent. Presumably, 
  this being the case in Latin America, Mexico must be in a similar situation, 
  but of course, we cannot affirm that it is so with so little research on the 
  subject.
  
  Another relevant aspect is the predominance of linguistic approaches in the 
  research, including studies that employ neo-rhetorical models such as that of 
  Toulmin. The linguistic approach assumes that argumentation is a function of 
  language, neglecting the logical reasoning element of it; i.e., that it is possible 
  to write a text that looks like an argument but really isn’t, as is the 
  case with some fallacies.
  
  Lastly, an important point is that, from the rhetorical perspective on which 
  this study is based, the separation of scientific from rhetorical argumentation 
  is indispensable, a distinction that also was not made in several of the texts 
  and research we encountered.
  
  Based then, on the premise—which was not actually defended but only mentioned 
  in this paper—that argumentation is necessary for educating the contemporary 
  student, it would seem that fostering research on the state of argumentation 
  and its teaching in Mexico is necessary. 
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*Translator: Jeanne Soennichsen.
  
Please cite the source as:
Monzón, L. A. (2011). Argumentation: A forgotten object of research in Mexico. Revista Electrónica de Investigación Educativa, 13(2), 41-54. Retrieved from http://redie.uabc.mx/vol13no2/contents-monzon.html