Table of Contents

Argument Name

Overview

[Brief description of the argument, its historical context, and significance]

Formal Structure

Premises:

1. [First premise]
2. [Second premise]
3. [Third premise]
...
n. [Final premise]

Conclusion: [Statement of the conclusion]

Formalization

[If applicable, provide a formal logical representation of the argument]

For example, using predicate logic:

$$ \begin{align} &1.\ \forall x (Px \rightarrow Qx) \\ &2.\ Pa \\ &\therefore Qa \end{align} $$

Explanation

[Detailed explanation of each premise and how they lead to the conclusion]

Objections and Responses

Objection 1: [Statement of objection]

Response: [Response to the objection]

Objection 2: [Statement of objection]

Response: [Response to the objection]

Variations

[Discussion of different formulations of the argument]

Historical Development

[How the argument has evolved through philosophical history]

Contemporary Relevance

[Current philosophical views on the argument]

See Also

References

~~DISCUSSION~~