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NotesPhilosophyTopic 11.2
Unit 11 · Doing philosophy — exam skills · Topic 11.2

IB Philosophy — Evaluating arguments

Topic 11.2 of IB Philosophy covers Evaluating arguments, which is part of Unit 11: Doing philosophy — exam skills. Students explore key concepts including Evaluating arguments. A strong understanding of evaluating arguments is essential for IB Philosophy exams and builds the foundation for connected topics across the syllabus.

Exam technique guidePractice questions

Key concepts in Evaluating arguments

Key Idea: Evaluating arguments is the skill that reaches the top band. Constructing an argument shows you can reason; testing one shows you can judge — and Paper 1 and Paper 2 reserve their highest marks for reasoned judgement. Master this and every essay does more than present views: it weighs them and decides.

🧠 The sub-skills, one card each

Topic 11.2 at a glance

  1. Two places to strike — Every argument can be attacked in exactly two ways: deny a PREMISE (so it's unsound) or deny the INFERENCE (so it's invalid). Always say which you're doing.
  2. The counterexample — One clear case that breaks a sweeping claim. 'All birds fly' — the penguin. A well-chosen counterexample can topple a premise in a single sentence.
  3. Name the fallacy — A precise label beats a vague 'that's unfair': straw man, ad hominem, begging the question, false dilemma, slippery slope, hasty generalisation.
  4. Steelman first — Beat the STRONGEST version of a view, not a weakened one. Attacking a distorted version (a straw man) fools no examiner and wins no marks.
  5. Weigh and judge — Line the objections up, decide which really bite, and reach a reasoned, consistent conclusion. This is the move that lifts an answer into the top band.
Attack the inference or a premise — never the person. Saying 'you would think that' is an ad hominem and earns nothing. A real evaluation asks two questions only: is a premise false? and does the conclusion actually follow? Everything else is noise.

✍️ See it work

IB-style questionEvaluate[25 marks]

Practice claim — 'People are naturally selfish, so any attempt to build a fair society is doomed to fail.' Evaluate this argument.

🔒 Model answer plan

See the mark-by-mark plan — for / against / judgement, with marking guidance — in study mode.

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Important: Disagreeing instead of evaluating. 'I don't think that's right' is not an objection. A real evaluation names the target — this premise is false (here's the counterexample) or this inference is a fallacy (here's its name) — and then weighs it. Rejecting a view without saying WHERE it breaks earns nothing.

✅ Check yourself

Six quick technique checks. If you can do these, you can evaluate under exam pressure.

The two lines of attack? Deny a premise (unsound) or deny the inference (invalid). Always say which one you're doing.

What is a counterexample? One clear case that shows a general claim is false — like a penguin against 'all birds fly'. It can topple a premise in a sentence.

Name three fallacies. Straw man (distorting a view), ad hominem (attacking the person), begging the question (assuming what you're proving). Also false dilemma, slippery slope, hasty generalisation.

What is steelmanning? Restating a view in its strongest, fairest form before you attack it. Beating the strong version, not a weak one, is what convinces.

Why not attack the person? It's an ad hominem — irrelevant to whether the argument is good. Attack the premise or the inference instead.

What is the top-band move? Weighing the objections and reaching a reasoned, consistent judgement — not just listing views, but deciding with a reason.

Exam Tips

  • Say explicitly whether you're denying a premise or the inference — precision here is exactly what the AO3 marks reward.
  • Keep a stock of counterexamples ready; one clear case can dismantle a sweeping premise faster than a paragraph of argument.
  • Name the fallacy — 'that's a false dilemma' beats 'that seems unfair' every time.
  • Always steelman before you strike, then end on a reasoned judgement — never leave the objections hanging without a decision.

What you'll learn in Topic 11.2

  • 11.2.1 Evaluating arguments
Suggested study order: Read the notes for each sub-topic below → test yourself with flashcards → attempt practice questions → review exam technique.

Study resources — 11.2 Evaluating arguments

11.2.1

Evaluating arguments

Notes

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Topic 11.2 Evaluating arguments forms a core part of Unit 11: Doing philosophy — exam skills in IB Philosophy. Mastering these concepts will strengthen your understanding of connected topics across the syllabus and prepare you for exam questions that require analysis, evaluation, and real-world application.

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11.3 Command terms: Explain vs Discuss/Evaluate
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