gordon r. mitchell abstract - pitt.edugordonm/preprints/switchside.pdfgordon r. mitchell abstract...

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Switch‐Side Debating Meets Demand‐Driven Rhetoric of Science Gordon R. Mitchell ABSTRACT U.S. government agencies are collaborating with outside scholars to untangle disparate threads of knotty techno‐scientific issues, in part by integrating structured debating exercises into institutional decision‐making processes such as intelligence assessment and public policy planning. These initiatives drive up demand for rhetoricians with skill and experience in what Protagoras called dissoi logoi — the practice of airing multiple sides of vexing questions for the purpose of stimulating critical thinking. In the contemporary milieu, dissoi logoi receives concrete expression in the tradition of intercollegiate "switch‐side debating," a form of structured argumentation categorized by some as a "cultural technology" with weighty ideological baggage. What exactly is that baggage, and how does it implicate plans to improve institutional decision‐making by drawing from rhetorical theory and expertise? Exploration of how switch‐side debating meets demand‐driven rhetoric of science not only sheds light on this question, but can also contribute to the burgeoning scholarly literature on deliberative democracy, inform argumentation studies, and suggest new avenues of inquiry in rhetorical theory and practice. KEYWORDS: rhetoric of science, argumentation, evidence, switch‐side debate, EPA, intelligence, Isocrates.

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Switch‐SideDebatingMeetsDemand‐DrivenRhetoricofScience

GordonR.Mitchell

ABSTRACT

U.S.governmentagenciesarecollaboratingwithoutsidescholarstountangle

disparatethreadsofknottytechno‐scientificissues,inpartbyintegratingstructured

debatingexercisesintoinstitutionaldecision‐makingprocessessuchasintelligence

assessmentandpublicpolicyplanning.Theseinitiativesdriveupdemandfor

rhetoricianswithskillandexperienceinwhatProtagorascalleddissoilogoi—the

practiceofairingmultiplesidesofvexingquestionsforthepurposeofstimulating

criticalthinking.Inthecontemporarymilieu,dissoilogoireceivesconcrete

expressioninthetraditionofintercollegiate"switch‐sidedebating,"aformof

structuredargumentationcategorizedbysomeasa"culturaltechnology"with

weightyideologicalbaggage.Whatexactlyisthatbaggage,andhowdoesitimplicate

planstoimproveinstitutionaldecision‐makingbydrawingfromrhetoricaltheory

andexpertise?Explorationofhowswitch‐sidedebatingmeetsdemand‐driven

rhetoricofsciencenotonlyshedslightonthisquestion,butcanalsocontributeto

theburgeoningscholarlyliteratureondeliberativedemocracy,inform

argumentationstudies,andsuggestnewavenuesofinquiryinrhetoricaltheoryand

practice.

KEYWORDS:rhetoricofscience,argumentation,evidence,switch‐side

debate,EPA,intelligence,Isocrates.

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Switch‐SideDebatingMeetsDemand‐DrivenRhetoricofScience

U.S.IntelligenceCommunitydirective205on"AnalyticOutreach,"signedinto

effectbyDirectorofNationalIntelligenceJohnMcConnellinJuly2008,aimsto

improveintelligenceanalysisbyborrowingcoreprinciplesfromthefieldof

rhetoric.Specifically,theoutreachprogramseeksassistancefromexpertsoutside

theintelligencecommunityto"closelyreviewanalyticalassumptions,logicand,

whereappropriate,evidence"inintelligenceassessments.1Thedirectiveindicates

thatoutsideexpertsalsomaybe"commissionedseparatelytoexaminean

alternativevieworapproachtoanissue;toarguetheprosandconstoajudgment

involvinguncertainty,ambiguity,ordebate."2Thisdescriptionevincesamarked

sensitivitytothevalueofrhetoric,sinceasDavidZarefskyobserves,"rhetoric's

responsibilityistoenablepeopletojudgewhetheraclaimisreasonableandjust,"

especiallywhencalled"tomakedecisionsunderconditionsofuncertainty,whenthe

rightcourseofactionisnotself‐evidentbutweneverthelessmustact."3Indeed,it

appearsthattheintelligencecommunityisattemptingtorefurbishitsanalytic

tradecraftbyhitchingitswagonstotheheuristicenginesofrhetoricalpractice.

1JohnMcConnell,"AnalyticOutreach,"IntelligenceCommunityDirective205(July16,2008),

http://www.dni.gov/electronic_reading_room/ICD%20205.pdf,p.2.2McConnell,"AnalyticOutreach,"3.AscyberintelligenceexpertJeffCarrobserves,the

BRIDGEprogram–onecomponentofMcConnell'sAnalyticOutreachinitiative–"providesaplatformfordebatingalternativeviewpointsandcomparingevidenceacrossagencies,specialties,andbordersofallkinds"(JeffCarr,"BuildingBridgeswiththeU.S.IntelligenceCommunity,"O'ReillyRadarweblog,April22,2009,http://radar.oreilly.com/2009/04/building‐bridges‐with‐the‐us‐i.html).Foratypologyofformsofalternativeanalysisinintelligencetradecraft,seeRogerZ.George,"FixingtheProblemofAnalyticalMindsets:AlternativeAnalysis,"inIntelligenceandtheNationalSecurityStrategist:EnduringIssuesandChallenges,ed.RogerZ.GeorgeandRobertD.Kline(Washington,D.C.:NationalDefenseUniversityPress,2004),311‐326

3DavidZarefsky,"TheResponsibilitiesofRhetoric,"inTheResponsibilitiesofRhetoric,ed.MichelleSmithandBarbaraWarnick(LongGrove,IL:WavelandPress,2010),15.ZarefskydevelopsthesegeneralizationsbydrawingontheworkofChaïmPerelmanandLucieOlbrechts‐Tyteca,whoseTheNewRhetoric:ATreatiseonArgumentation(NotreDame,IN:UniversityofNotreDamePress,1969)developsatheoryofrhetoricyokedtoargumentation.ZarefskyalsoforegroundsStephenToulmin'sinfluentialTheUsesofArgument,abookthatformorethanhalfacentury,hascarvedoutspaceforstudyofinformalargumentpatternsinfieldssuchasphilosophy,education,andcommunication(Cambridge:CambridgeUniversityPress,1958).

3

Sucheffortsarebeingdrivennotonlybyrecommendationsfromexecutive

directives,blue‐ribboncommitteesandlegislativedecrees,4butalsobyscholarly

commentary.ConsiderDouglasHartandStevenSimon’spropositionthatonemajor

causeoftheintelligencecommunity’smisjudgmentsonIraqin2002‐2003was

‘‘poorargumentationandanalysiswithintheintelligencedirectorate.’’Asaremedy,

HartandSimonrecommendthatintelligenceagenciesencourageanalyststoengage

in‘‘structuredargumentsanddialogues’’designedtofacilitate‘‘sharingand

expressionofmultiplepointsofview’’andcultivate‘‘criticalthinkingskills.’’5

TheU.S.intelligencecommunity'sAnalyticOutreachinitiativeimplements

whatRonaldWalterGreeneandDarrinHickscall"switch‐sidedebating"–acritical

thinkingexercisewhereinterlocutorstemporarilysuspendbeliefintheir

convictionstobringforthmultipleanglesofanargument.6DrawingonFoucault,

GreeneandHicksclassifyswitch‐sidesdebatingasa"culturaltechnology,"one

ladenwithideologicalbaggage.Specifically,theyclaimthatswitch‐sidedebatingis

"investedwithethicalsubstance"7andthatparticipationintheactivityinculcates

"ethicalobligationsintrinsictothetechnology,"8includingpoliticalliberalismanda

worldviewcoloredbyAmericanexceptionalism.Onfirstblush,thefactthatadeputy

U.S.directorofnationalintelligenceisattemptingtodeploythisculturaltechnology

tostrengthensecretintelligencetradecraftinsupportofU.S.foreignpolicywould

seemtoqualifyasExhibit"B"insupportofGreeneandHicks'generalthesis.9

4McConnell'sdebateinitiativestemsdirectlyfromrecommendationsbytheSilberman‐Robb

Commission's2005reportonIraqWMDintelligence,whichcallsforimplementationofa"formalsystemforcompetitiveandevenexplicitlycontrariananalysis.Suchgroupsmustbelicensedtobetroublesome"(seeUnitedStates,CommissionontheIntelligenceCapabilitiesoftheUnitedStatesRegardingWeaponsofMassDestruction,ReporttothePresident,March2005,http://www.wmd.gov/report/,170).Section1017oftheIntelligenceReformandTerrorismPreventionActof2004alsocallsforaredoubledcommitmentto‘‘redteam’’competitiveintelligenceanalysisasakeyreformplank.SeeCongressionalRecord,December7,2004,H10930‐H10993.

5DouglasHartandStevenSimon,‘‘ThinkingStraightandTalkingStraight:ProblemsofIntelligenceAnalysis,’’Survival48(Spring2006):50.

6RonaldWalterGreeneandDarrinHicks,"LostConvictions:DebatingBothSidesandtheEthicalSelf‐fashioningofLiberalCitizens,"CulturalStudies19(January2005):100‐126.

7GreeneandHicks,"LostConvictions,"110.8GreeneandHicks,"LostConvictions,"111.9Exhibit"A,"forGreeneandHicks,istheAmericanintercollegiatepolicydebate

community'sprojectofcultivatingundergraduatestudentcitizenshipbyhavingdebatersdebate

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Yetthepicturegrowsmorecomplexwhenoneconsiderswhatishappening

overattheEnvironmentalProtectionAgency(EPA),whereenvironmentalscientist

IbrahimGoodwiniscollaboratingwithJohnW.Davisonaprojectthatusesswitch‐

sidedebatingtocleanupairandwater.InApril2008,thatinitiativebroughttop

intercollegiatedebatersfromfouruniversitiestoWashington,D.C.,foraseriesof

debatesonthetopicofwaterquality,heldforanaudienceofEPAsubjectmatter

expertsworkingoninterstateriverpollutionandbottledwaterissues.AnApril

2009follow‐upeventinHuntingtonBeach,California,yieldedanotherdebate

weighingtherelativemeritsofmonitoringversusremediationasbeachpollution

strategies."Weusenationallyrankedintercollegiatedebateprogramstoresearch

andpresentthearguments,bothproandcon,devoidofspecialinterestinthe

outcome,"explainsDavis."Indoingso,agencyrepresentativesnowremainsquarely

withinthedecision‐makingroletherebyneutralizingoverzealousadvocacythatcan

inhibitlearneddiscourse."10

TheintelligencecommunityandEPAdebatinginitiativesvaryquiteabit

simplybyvirtueofthecontrastingpolicyobjectivespursuedbytheirsponsoring

agencies(foreignpolicyversusenvironmentalprotection).Significantprocess‐level

differencesmarkofftherespectiveinitiativesaswell;theformerprojectentails

largelyone‐wayinteractionsdesignedtosluiceinsightfrom"opensources"to

intelligenceanalystsworkinginclassifiedenvironmentsandproducinglargely

secretassessments.Incontrast,theEPA'sdebatinginitiativeisconductedthrough

publicforumsinapolicyprocessrequiredbylawtobetransparent.Thisgranularity

troublesGreeneandHicks'deterministicframingofswitch‐sidedebateasan

ideologicallysmoothandconsistentculturaltechnology.Inanalternativeapproach,

bothsidesofthe1954collegedebatetopicontheU.S.recognitionofCommunistChina.ForcommentaryonGreeneandHicks'claimsregardingthispoint,seeEricEnglish,CarlyWoods,StevenLlano,GordonR.Mitchell,CatherineE.Morrison,andJohnRief,"DebateasaWeaponofMassDestruction,"Communication&Critical/CulturalStudies,4(2007):222‐226.GreeneandHicksrespondto"DebateasaWeaponofMassDestruction"inapaper,"ConscientiousObjections:DebatingBothSidesandtheCulturesofDemocracy,"presentedattheSixteenthNCA/AFAConferenceonArgumentationheldinAlta,UT,July30‐August2,2009.

10JohnW.Davis,"UsingIntercollegiateDebatetoInformEnvironmentalPolicyDiscourseinAmerica,"ConcurrentSessionProgramDescription,U.S.EnvironmentalProtectionAgencyCommunityInvolvementTrainingConference,Seattle,Washington,August18‐20,2009.

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thisessaypositionsdebateasamalleablemethodofdecision‐making,oneutilized

bydifferentactorsinmyriadwaystopursuevariouspurposes.Bybringingforththe

textureinherentintheassociatedmessy"mangleofpractice"11suchanapproach

haspotentialtodeepenourunderstandingofdebateasadynamicandcontingent,

ratherthanstaticformofrhetoricalperformance.

JuxtapositionoftheintelligencecommunityandEPAdebatinginitiatives

illuminatesadditionalavenuesofinquiry,onesthattakeoverlappingelementsof

thetwoprojectsaspointsofdeparture.Bothtacklecomplex,multifacetedand

technicaltopicsthatdonotlendthemselvestoreductionist,formalanalysis,and

bothtapintothecreativeenergylatentinwhatProtagorasofAbderacalleddissoi

logoi,theprocessoflearningaboutacontroversialorunresolvedissuebyairing

opposingviewpoints.12Inshort,theseinstitutionsareemployingdebateasatoolof

deliberation,seekingoutsideexpertisetohelpaccomplishtheiraims.Suchtrends

provideanoccasiontorevisitapresumptioncommonlyheldamongtheoristsof

deliberativedemocracythatdebateanddeliberationarefundamentallyopposed

practices,astheintelligencecommunity'sAnalyticOutreachprogramandEPA

debatinginitiativesrepresentexampleswheredebatingexercisesaredesignedto

facilitate,notfrustratedeliberativegoals.

Themovebytherespectiveinstitutionstotapoutsideresourcesforsupport

alsoimplicatesthelong‐simmeringtheoreticaldiscussioninrhetoricofscience

circles,whereDilipGaonkarchargesthatscholarssuchasJohnCampbell,Lawrence

Prelli,andAlanGrosserrbyutilizingconceptsfromclassicalGreekrhetoricasa

hermeneuticmetadiscourseforinterpretingscientifictexts.13InGaonkar'stelling,

the"hegemonic"projectto"globalize"rhetoricbybringingalltextualartifacts(even

11AndrewPickering,TheMangleofPractice:Time,AgencyandScience(Chicago:University

ofChicagoPress,1995).12RosamondKent,Sprague,ed.,TheOlderSophists,2ded.(Indianapolis:Hackett,2001);see

alsoJohnPoulakos,"RhetoricandCivicEducation:FromtheSophiststoIsocrates,"inIsocratesandCivicEducation,ed.TakisPoulakosandDavidJ.Depew(Austin:UniversityofTexasPress,2004),81‐82;andEdwardSchiappa,ProtagorasandLogos:AStudyinGreekPhilosophyandRhetoric(Columbia,SC:UniversityofSouthCarolinaPress,1991).

13DilipParameshwarGaonkar,"TheIdeaofRhetoricintheRhetoricofScience,"inRhetoricalHermeneutics,ed.AlanG.GrossandWilliamM.Keith(Albany,NY:StateUniversityofNewYorkPress,1997),25‐85.

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hardscience)underitsscopeisanill‐fatedexerciseinsupply‐sideepistemology.Yet

theintelligencecommunity'sAnalyticOutreachprojectandtheEPA'sdebating

initiativesentaildemand‐drivenrhetoricofscience,whereinstitutionalactorsseek

enlistmentofrhetoric'sexpertisetotackletechnicalproblems.Ratherthanrhetoric

pushingitsepistemologyonscience,herewehavesciencepullingrhetoricintoits

interdisciplinaryorbit.14Coulditbethatthe"thinness"oftheproductivistclassical

Greeklexicon,forGaonkaraliabilityinrhetoricalcriticism,herebecomesastrength

supportingthetypeofpractice‐orientedscholarshipthatZarefskyenvisioned

growingoutofhistheoryofargumentationas"hypothesistesting"?15Thefollowing

analysis,whichconsidersinturntheintelligencecommunityandEPAdebating

initiatives,engagesthisquestion.

EvidenceandArgumentFieldsinIntelligenceCommunityDeliberations

"Theaxiomofallrhetoricistheprincipleofinsufficientreason,"saysHans

Blumenberg.16Inthisformulation,whenapressingsituationcallsforaction,butall

thefactsarenotyetin,rhetoriclendspracticalguidancetothoseseekingtonavigate

unchartedwaters.InLloydBitzer'sshopwornterminology,such"rhetorical

situations"aremeaningvacuumsthatinvite,even"call"discoursetothesceneas

"fitting"remediesforthe"imperfect"stateofaffairs.17Yetthecurrenteraof

14Foraprogrammaticanalysisexploringpossiblecontoursofanappliedresearchprogram

inrhetoricofscienceutilizingapublicdebatemethodology,seeGordonR.MitchellandMarcusParoske,"Fact,Friction,andPoliticalConvictioninSciencePolicyControversies,"SocialEpistemology14(2000):89‐108.Paroske's"DeliberatingInternationalSciencePolicyControversies:UncertaintyandAIDSinSouthAfrica"illustrateshowthisresearchapproachcanalsobeextendedinextendedcasestudies(seeQuarterlyJournalofSpeech95[2009]:148‐170).

15SeeDavidZarefsky,"ArgumentasHypothesis‐testing,"inDavidA.Thomas,ed.,AdvancedDebate:ReadingsinTheory,PracticeandTeaching(Skokie,Illinois:NationalTextbookCompany,1979),427‐437.

16HansBlumenberg,"AnAnthropologicalApproachtotheContemporarySignificanceofRhetoric,"inAfterPhilosophy?:EndorTransformation?,ed.KennethBaynes,JamesBohmanandThomasMcCarthy;trans.RobertM.Wallace(Cambridge:MITPress,1987),447.

17LloydF.Bitzer,“TheRhetoricalSituation,”PhilosophyandRhetoric1(1968):1‐14;seealsoRichardE.Vatz,“TheMythoftheRhetoricalSituation,”PhilosophyandRhetoric6(1973):154‐161;ScottConsigny,“RhetoricanditsSituations,”PhilosophyandRhetoric7(1974):175‐185;andKathleenM.HallJamieson,“GenericConstraintsandtheRhetoricalSituation,”PhilosophyandRhetoric6(1973):162‐170.

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"contentabundance"18seemstoinvertthiscommonlyheldsenseoftherhetorical

situation,aswestruggletostayafloatinthewakeofnewwavesoffacts,figures,and

testimonychurnedoutbytoday'sproliferatingsitesofknowledgeproduction.19

AccordingtoRichardLanham,"we'redrowning"inthisendemicstateofsurplus

information,strugglingtomarshalsufficientattentionneededtomakesenseofit

all.20Tocapturethissenseofinundation,DamienPfistercoinstheterm

"hyperpublicity"todescribethe"massiveexpansioninthecapacityofpersonal

mediatorecord,archive,andmakesearchablethoughts,events,andinteractionsin

publiclyaccessibledatabases."21Inthismeaning‐saturatedenvironment,whichhas

"doublepotentialtoenrichandthreatenpubliclife,"22thechallengehaslesstodo

withfiguringouthowtomakepracticaldecisionsbasedonscarceshredsof

evidence(rhetoricfillingalack);andmoretodowithsortingthroughever‐

expandingmoundsofevidencewhoserelevancetopressingdecisionsmaynotbe

immediatelyapparent(rhetoricrespondingtoasurplus).

TheofficialU.S.intelligencecommunityroutinelyfacessuchinverted

rhetoricalsituationswhenitiscalledupontodeliverconsensusjudgmentssuchas

NationalIntelligenceEstimates.Toreachsuchjudgments,analystsmustcomb

throughterabytesofdigitaldatafromSIGINT(signalsintelligencegatheredfrom

satellitesandothermonitoringdevices),HUMINT(humanintelligencedrawnfrom

informantsandagents),aswellasaburgeoningsupplyof"opensource"intelligence

(datainthepublicdomain).Asthecommunityiscomposedofsixteenseparate

18MichaelJensen,"ScholarlyAuthorityintheAgeofAbundance:RetainingRelevancewithin

theNewLandscape,"KeynoteAddressattheJSTORannualParticipatingPublisher'sConference,NewYork,NewYork,May13,2008,http://www.nap.edu/staff/mjensen/jstor.htm.

19DamienPfister,"TowardaGrammaroftheBlogosphere:RhetoricandAttentionintheNetworkedImaginary"(Ph.D.diss.,UniversityofPittsburgh,2009).Todevelopthispointfurther,Pfister("TowardAGrammar,"39)pointstoHerbertSimon's“DesigningOrganizationsforanInformation‐RichWorld,”whichsuggests"awealthofinformationcreatesapovertyofattention,andaneedtoallocatethatattentionefficientlyamongtheoverabundanceofinformationsourcesthatmightconsumeit"inComputers,Communication,andthePublicInterest,ed.MartinGreenberger(Baltimore:JohnsHopkinsUniversity,1971),41.

20RichardLanham,TheEconomicsofAttention:StyleandSubstanceintheInformationAge(Chicago:UniversityofChicagoPress,2006),xi.

21Pfister,"GrammaroftheBlogosphere,"384.22Pfister,"GrammaroftheBlogosphere,"384.

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agenciesandentitiesthateachservedifferentcustomersandpursuedistinct

approachestointelligenceanalysis,heterogeneousperspectivesoftencomplicate

theprocessofsortingtheproverbialwheatfromthechaff.AsSimonandHart

explain,"thebasicproblemstemsfrommovingknowledgecreatedusingevidence

andanalysisinonegroupororganisationintoanother.Thisisnotatrivial

undertaking,becausetheprocess,languageandultimatepurposeofthecreated

knowledgeoftendifferradicallybetweentheoriginatingandreceiving

organisations."23Asaresult,"analysesinvolvingjihadistperceptionsortechnical

detailsconcerningchemical,biologicalornuclearweaponscanoftengenerate

interpretiveorsemanticdifferencesbetweenoriginatingandreceiving

organisationsastowhataword,measurementoroutcomeactuallymeans."24Here,

centrifugalforcesofprofessionalspecializationandhorizontalknowledgediffusion

scatterthepooluponwhichanalystsdrawdata.Simultaneously,centripetalforces

obligethesesameanalyststosynthesizevastsumsofdiverseinformationand

rendercoherentargumentsoncomplexandmultifacetedissues.Thischallenge

stemsfromatensionbornefromthepushbroughtaboutbythesplinteringofthe

intelligencecommunityintodisparateagencies,ontheonehand,andthepullof

institutionaldirectivesrequiringco‐ordinationofintelligenceproducts,onthe

other.

Surmountingthiscomplexepistemologicaldilemmarequiresmorethan

sheerinformationprocessingpower;itdemandsformsofcommunicativedexterity

thatenabletranslationofideasacrossdifferencesandfacilitateco‐operativework

byinterlocutorsfromheterogeneousbackgrounds.Howcansuchcommunicative

dexteritybecultivated?HartandSimonseestructuredargumentationasa

promisingtoolinthisregard.Intheirview,theuniquevirtueofrigorousdebatesis

thatthey"supportdiversepointsofviewwhileencouragingconsensusformation."

Thisdualfunctionofargumentationprovides"bothintelligenceproducersand

policyconsumerswithaviewintothemethodologiesandassociatedevidenceused

23HartandSimon,"ThinkingStraight,"46.24HartandSimon,"ThinkingStraight,"47.

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toproduceanalyticalproduct,effectivelycreatingacommonlanguagethatmight

helpmoveknowledgeacrossorganisationalbarrierswithoutlossofaccuracyor

relevance."25HartandSimon'sinsights,coupledwiththepreviouslymentioned

institutionalinitiativespromotingswitch‐sidedebatingintheintelligence

community,carveoutanewzoneofrelevancewhereargumentationtheory's

salienceispronouncedandgrowing.Giventhecentralityofevidentiaryanalysisin

thiszone,itisusefultorevisithowargumentationscholarshavetheorizedways

evidencefunctionsindebatingcontexts.

InthewordsofAustinFreeley,"evidenceistherawmaterialof

argumentation.Itconsistsoffacts,opinionsandobjectsthatareusedtogenerate

proof."26Here,evidencebecomesthe"factualfoundationfortheclaimsofthe

advocates."27Whenaninterlocutorattemptstoforwardclaimsbasedondata,"the

processofadvancingfromevidencetoconclusionisargument."28Whatarethe

differenttypesofevidence?Whicharemostpersuasiveincertainsituations?How

canevidencebemisused?Whatdoesn'tcountaslegitimateevidence?Inthefieldof

argumentation,scholarshavelonggrappledwiththesequestions,oftenby

developingidiosyncratictaxonomiesofevidenceusage.29So,forexample,one

textbookbreaksdowntypesofevidenceintothreecategories:examples,statistics

andauthority;andthreesources:original,hearsay,written.30Anearliereffort

identifiesthree"formsofdatathatprovideproofforaclaim"asunwritten,ordinary,

25HartandSimon,"ThinkingStraight,"53.Onrhetoric'sroleasamediumoftranslationinmedicalresearch,seeGordonR.MitchellandKathleenM.McTigue,"PromotingTranslationalResearchinMedicinethroughDeliberation,"paperpresentedatthe“Justification,Reason,andAction"ConferenceinHonorofProfessorDavidZarefsky,NorthwesternUniversiy,Evanston,IL,May29&30,2009.

26AustinJ.Freeley,ArgumentationandDebate:CriticalThinkingforReasonedDecisionMaking,9thed.(Belmont:Wadsworth,1996),107;seealsoJamesH.McBurney,JamesM.O'NeillandGlenE.Mills,ArgumentationandDebate:TechniquesofaFreeSociety(NewYork:Macmillan,1951),73.

27DavidL.Vancil,RhetoricandArgumentation(Boston:AllynandBacon,1993),48.28A.CraigBaird,Argumentation,DiscussionandDebate(NewYork:McGraw‐Hill,1950),90.29Forareviewoftheliteratureonempiricaldimensionsofevidence'sroleinargument,

especiallyregardingperceptionsofevidencestrengthbyinterlocutors,seeRodneyA.ReynoldsandJ.LynnReynolds,"Evidence,"inThePersuasionHandbook:DevelopmentsinTheoryandPractice,ed.JamesPriceDillardandMichaelPfau(ThousandOaks,CA:Sage,2002),427‐444.

30TrischaGoodnowKnappandLawrenceA.Galizio,ElementsofParliamentaryDebate:AGuidetoPublicArgument(NewYork:Longman,1999),17‐18.

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andexpert.31Inablisteringcritique,DaleHamplequestionstheusefulnessofthese

projects:"Thetypologies—forindeedtheyareplural—differfromtextbookto

textbookandhaveneverbeendefendedashavinganyphenomenalrealityfor

anyonenottakinganargumentationexam."32Onefactoraccountingforthelimited

conceptualappealoftheseevidencetaxonomiesisthatsuchschemesaretiedtightly

tothepracticalactivityassociatedwiththeirdevelopment—intercollegiate

debating.SinceasDeanFadelypointsout,the"bedrockofcontestdebate"is

evidence,33itisonlynaturalthatmanyofthesetaxonomicaleffortsaredesignedto

supportstudentclassroomwork.Forexample,theprefacetoRobertandDale

Newman's1969Evidenceexplains,"Thisbookisdesignedprimarilyforstudentsof

exposition,discussion,persuasion,andargumentwhomustbuttresstheirspeeches

oressayswithevidence."34Suchapedagogicalorientationunderwritesthepractical

dimensionofevidencestudies,wheretheemphasisrestsoncultivatinginvention

skillssufficienttoenablestudentstoresearch,deployanddefendevidencedclaims

inargumentativesituations.35

Arelatedstrandofscholarshipconcernsthemobilizationofargumentation

theorytocritiqueevidentiarypracticesusedintheconductofpublicaffairs.This

criticalorientationisalsomanifestinNewmanandNewman's1969Evidencetext,

whichfeaturesanalysesoftheauthenticity,credibility,andfactualgroundingof

evidenceprovidedbygovernmentofficials,journalists,andexpertsdiscussing

publicpolicyissues.Later,RobertNewman'sarticle‘‘CommunicationPathologiesof

IntelligenceSystems,’’woulddeploythissameframeworktoshowhowintelligence

failuresrangingfromtheBayofPigstoVietnamwererootedinsystematic

31Baird,Argumentation,DiscussionandDebate,95.32DaleHample,Arguing:ExchangingReasonsFacetoFace(Mahwah,NJ:LawrenceErlbaum

Associates,2005),200.33DeanFadely,Advocacy:TheEssentialsofArgumentationandDebate(Dubuque,IA:

KendallHunt,1994),55.34RobertP.NewmanandDaleR.Newman,Evidence(NewYork:Houghton‐Mifflin,1969),

vii.35Onthegeneraltopicofhowthecommunicationfield'spedagogicalrootsinflect

communicationtheory,seeRichardGraffandMichaelLeff,"RevisionistHistoriographyandRhetoricalTradition(s),"inTheViabilityoftheRhetoricalTradition,ed.RichardGraff,ArthurE.Walzer,andJanetM.Atwill(Albany:StateUniversityofNewYorkPress,2005),11‐30.

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institutionalpressuresthatdistortedcommunicationbetweenintelligenceanalysts

andpolicy‐makers,causingthemtomishandleevidence.36

Asonetracestheevolutionofevidencestudiesbeyondthedebatecontest

roundcontext,ahostofotherargument‐informedanalysescomeintoview.Someof

theseprojectsmeasureempiricallythepsychologicaldimensionofevidenceuptake

byaudiences,37whileothers,oftenworkingunderthebanner"informallogic,"

explorethe"fielddependency"ofevidencenorms.Whereanalyticaltreatmentsby

logicalempiricistssuchasCarlHempelsoughttodevelopuniversalaccountsof

evidencethatwouldholdfastacrossobjectdomains,argumentationscholars,ledby

StephenToulmin,havepositedthatthedomainsinwhichargumenttakesplace

structureexpectationsandnormsregardingevidence.38Thus,answerstoquestions

like"whichtypeofevidenceismostpersuasive"pivotdependingontheargument

fieldinwhichtheargumenttakesplace.Hearsaytestimony,forinstance,maybe

persuasiveevidenceforajournalistworkingonastoryaboutarecentcrime.Yet

thatsametestimonywilllikelyreceivelesssympathetictreatmentinacourtroom

trialwhereaprosecutorattemptstopresentitasevidenceagainstasuspect

accusedofcommittingthecrime.Thesedimensionsofcontingencyand

interpretationarelargelyabsentinformallogic,where"fieldinvariant"rulesgovern

connectionsbetweenclaimsandtheirsupportingevidence.AsChaimPerelmanand

LucieOlbrechts‐TytecashowinTheNewRhetoric,theconceptualscaffoldingof

argumentationiswellequippedtoshedlightonpreciselythosesituationswhere

deductiveformsofreasoningandformallogicfailtodeliver.39

The"fielddependent"approachtothestudyofevidenceisstraightforward

wheninventionandcritiqueareapproachedwithinthehorizonofadistinctfield.

Onefirstdiscernsthelocalnormsgoverningevidenceintheparticularfieldinwhich

36RobertP.Newman,‘‘CommunicationPathologiesofIntelligenceSystems,’’Speech

Monographs42(1975):273‐90.37DaleHample,“TestingaModelofValueArgumentandEvidence,”Communication

Monographs44(1977):106‐120;andHansHoeken,"Anecdotal,StatisticalandCausalEvidence:TheirPerceivedandActualPersuasiveness,”Argumentation15(2001):425‐437.

38CarlG.Hempel,"APurelySyntacticalDefinitionofConfirmation,"JournalofSymbolicLogic8(1943):122‐143;Toulmin,UsesofArgument.

39PerelmanandOlbrechts‐Tyteca,TheNewRhetoric.

12

anargumenttakesplace,thenappliesthosenormstothetaskathand,whetheritbe

creationofnovelargumentationoranalysisofextantargumentsalreadyonrecord.

Yetthingsgrowcomplicatedwhenthediscursivemilieuspanstwoormore

argumentfields,especiallywhenthosefieldsfeatureincompatibleconventions

regardingevidence.ConsiderthattheCentralIntelligenceAgency(CIA's)

prioritizationofthewarningfunctioninintelligenceanalysispredisposesCIA

analyststodeploydifferentevidencestandardsthantheStateDepartment'sBureau

ofIntelligenceandResearch,whereanalystsaretrainedtoprioritizeaccurate

predictionoverthreatwarning.40Onefactoraccountingfortheintelligencefailure

priortothe2003IraqWarwasaninabilitybyintelligenceanalystsandpolicy‐

makerstofullyappreciatehowthedisparateassessmentsregardingSaddam

Hussein'sarsenalofunconventionalweaponrycouldbeunderstoodasproductsof

thedistinctargumentfieldsproducingtheassessments.

Someofthespecificprojectsunderwayintheintelligencecommunitythat

giveDirectorMcConnell'sAnalyticOutreachinitiativeconcreteexpressionshow

howtheleadershipisbankingontheprocessofargumentationtohelppreventa

repeatofthe2003IraqWarintelligencefailure.41Forinstance,DanDoney,oneof

McConnell'sdeputies,isspearheadingaprojectnamedBRIDGEthat"providesa

platformfordebatingalternativeviewpointsandcomparingevidenceacross

agencies,specialties,andbordersofallkinds."42AsDoneyexplains,"BRIDGEis

designedtoenablecrowd‐sourcingofintelligenceapplications–followingthe

iPhoneAppStoremodel–byprovidingalowbarrier‐to‐entryplatformtostimulate

innovationandenableanalyststodiscovernextgenerationcapabilitiesthathave

valuetotheirmission."43OnecannothelpbutrecallGreeneandHicks'formulation

ofdebatingasatechnologyafterreadingasummaryofthefirstwaveofapplications

40GregThielmann,"IntelligenceinPreventiveMilitaryStrategies,"inHittingFirst:

PreventiveForceinU.S.SecurityStrategy,ed.WilliamW.KellerandGordonR.Mitchell(Pittsburgh:UniversityofPittsburghPress,2006),153‐174.

41JohnA.Kringen,‘‘HowWe’veImprovedIntelligence;MinimizingtheRiskof‘Groupthink’,’’WashingtonPost,April3,2006,p.A19.

42Carr,"BuildingBridges."43DanDoney,quotedinCarr,"BuildingBridges."

13

featuredintheBRIDGEprogram.ThefirstWeb‐based"App,"named"Collaborative

AnalysisofCompetingHypotheses,"enablesanalysts"togatherevidence

collaborativelyandthinkmorecriticallyabouttheplausiblescenarios,mitigating

bias"and"honeinondifferences,makingdebatemoreconstructiveand

encouragingdeeperreasoning."44AnotheronlineApp,"HotGrinds,"supports

"semanticsearch,expertiseidentification,andmanagementoverviewsofdebate"

that"providegreatercollectiveawarenessandenhancedcollaboration."45Thekey

premiseunderlyingspecificdesignfeaturesofthissoftwareisthatthroughonline

connectivity,analystswillbeempoweredtoredoubletheircapacityfor

collaborativedeliberation.

Thewatchwordsfortheintelligencecommunity'sdebatinginitiative–

collaboration,criticalthinking,collectiveawareness–resonatewithkeyterms

anchoringthestudyofdeliberativedemocracy,oneofthecommunicationfield's

hottestresearchareas.Inamajornewtext,JohnGastildefinesdeliberationasa

processwherebypeople"carefullyexamineaproblemandarriveatawell‐reasoned

solutionafteraperiodofinclusive,respectfulconsiderationofdiversepointsof

view."46GastilandhiscolleaguesinorganizationssuchastheKetteringFoundation

andtheNationalCoalitionforDialogueandDeliberationarepursuinganexciting

researchprogramthatforegroundsthedemocratictelosofdeliberativeprocesses.

Workinthisareafeaturesablendofconcreteinterventionsandstudiesofcitizen

empowerment.47Notably,akeythemeinmuchofthisliteratureconcernsthe

relationshipbetweendeliberationanddebate,withthelattertermoftenloaded

withpejorativebaggageandworkingasanegativefoiltohighlightthepositive

qualitiesofdeliberation.48"Mostpoliticaldiscussions,however,aredebates.Stories

44Carr,"BuildingBridges."45Carr,"BuildingBridges."46JohnGastil,PoliticalCommunicationandDeliberation(ThousandOaks,CA:Sage,2008),8.47Foranilluminatingcollectionofcasestudiesinthisburgeoningareaofscholarship,see

JohnGastilandPeterLevine,ed.,TheDeliberativeDemocracyHandbook(SanFrancisco,Jossey‐Bass,2005).

48OnenotableexceptionisChristopherF.KarpowitzandJaneMasbridge'schapter,"DisagreementandConsensus:TheImportanceofDynamicUpdatinginPublicDeliberation,"inTheDeliberativeDemocracyHandbook,237‐253.

14

inthemediaturnpoliticsintoanever‐endingseriesofcontests.Peoplegetswept

intotakingsides;theirenergygoesintofiguringoutwhoorwhatthey'reforor

against,"saysKetteringpresidentDavidMathewsandcoauthorNoelleMcAfee.

"Deliberationisdifferent.Itisneitherapartisanargumentwhereopposingsidestry

towinnoracasualconversationconductedwithpolitecivility.Publicdeliberationis

ameansbywhichcitizensmaketoughchoicesaboutbasicpurposesanddirections

fortheircommunitiesandtheircountry.Itisawayofreasoningandtalking

together."49MathewsandMcAfee'sdistrustaboutthedebateprocessisalmost

paradigmaticamongsttheoristsandpractitionersofKettering‐styledeliberative

democracy.

Oneconceptualmechanismforreinforcingthisdebate‐deliberation

oppositionischaracterizationofdebateasaprocessinimicaltodeliberativeaims,

withdebatersadoptingdogmaticandfixedpositionsthatfrustratethedeliberative

objectiveof"choicework."Inthisregister,EmilyRobertsonobserves,"unlike

deliberators,debatersaretypicallynotopentothepossibilityofbeingshown

wrong....Debatersarenottryingtofindthebestsolutionbykeepinganopenmind

abouttheopponent'spointofview."50Similarly,foundingdocumentsfromthe

UniversityofHouston‐Downtown'sUniversityofHouston‐DowntownCenterfor

PublicDeliberationstate,"Publicdeliberationisaboutchoicework,whichis

differentfromadialogueoradebate.Indialogue,peopleoftenlooktorelatetoeach

other,tounderstandeachother,andtotalkaboutmoreinformalissues.Indebate,

therearegenerallytwopositionsandpeoplearegenerallylookingto'win'their

side."51Debate,casthereasthetheoreticalscapegoat,providesaconvenient,low‐

waterbenchmarkforexplaininghowotherformsofdeliberativeinteractionbetter

promotecooperative"choicework."

49DavidMathewsandNoelleMcAfee,MakingChoicesTogether:ThePowerofPublic

Deliberation(Dayton,OH:KetteringFoundation,2003),10.50EmilyRobertson,"TeacherEducationinaDemocraticSociety:LearningandTeachingthe

PracticesofDemocraticParticipaton,"inTheHandbookofResearchonTeacherEducation,ed.MarilynCochran‐Smith,SharonFreiman‐Nemser,andD.JohnMcIntyre(London:Routledge,2008),32.

51UniversityofHouston‐DowntownCenterforPublicDeliberation,"WhatisPublicDeliberation,"http://www.dt.uh.edu/academic/colleges/humanities/uhd_cpd/what_is.html#.

15

TheKettering‐inspiredframeworkreceivessupportfromperversionsofthe

debateprocesssuchasvapidpresidentialdebatesandverbalpyrotechnicsfoundon

Crossfire‐styletelevisionshows.Incontrast,theintelligencecommunity'sdebating

initiativestandsasanettlesomeanomalyforthesetheoreticalframeworks,with

debateserving,ratherthanfrustrating,theendsofdeliberation.Thepresenceof

suchananomalywouldseemtopointtothewisdomoffashioningatheoretical

orientationthatframesthedebate‐deliberationconnectionincontingent,rather

thanstaticterms,withtherelationshipbetweenthecategoriesshiftingalongwith

thevariouscontextsinwhichtheymanifestinpractice.52Suchanapproachgestures

towardtheimportanceofrhetoricallyinformedcriticalworkonmultiplelevels.

First,thecontingencyofsituatedpracticeinvitesanalysisgearedtoassess,in

particularcases,theextenttowhichdebatepracticesenableand/orconstrain

deliberativeobjectives.Regardingtheintelligencecommunity'sdebatinginitiative,

suchananalyticalperspectivehighlights,forexample,thetightconnectionbetween

thedeliberativegoalsestablishedbyintelligenceofficialsandthe"cultural

technology"manifestintheBRDIGEproject'sonlinedebatingapplicationssuchas

"HotGrinds."

Anadditionaldimensionofnuanceemergingfromthisavenueofanalysis

pertainstotheprecisenatureofthedeliberativegoalsmadeaspartofBRIDGE.

ProgramdescriptionsnotablyeschewKettering‐stylereferencestodemocratic

citizenempowerment,yetfeaturedeliberationprominentlyaskeyingredientof

strongintelligencetradecraft.Thiscaveatisespeciallysalienttoconsiderwhenit

comestothesecondcategoryofrhetoricallyinformedcriticalworkinvitedbythe

contingentaspectofspecificdebateinitiatives.Tograspthislayeritisusefulto

appreciatehowthenameoftheBRIDGEprojectconstitutesaninvitationforthose

outsidetheintelligencecommunitytoparticipateintheanalyticoutreacheffort.

52Thislineofthinkingisintendedtoendorseneithercompleteerasureofthetheoretical

differencesbetweendebateanddeliberation,nordenigrationofdeliberationonitsownterms.Rather,itsignalsreceptivitytotheoreticalframeworks,suchasJamesCrosswhite's"rhetoricofreason,"thatforegroundthemultifaceteddimensionsofargumentativepractice,somewhicharemoreconsistentwithdeliberativeobjectivesthanothers—seehisTheRhetoricofReason:WritingandtheAttractionsofArgument(Madison:UniversityofWisconsinPress,1996).

16

AccordingtoDoney,BRIDGE"providesanenvironmentforAnalyticOutreach‐‐a

placewhereICanalystscanreachouttoexpertiseelsewhereinfederal,state,and

localgovernment,inacademia,andindustry.Newcommunitiesofinterestcanform

quicklyinBRIDGEthroughthe'weboftrust'accesscontrolmodel‐‐accesstominds

outsidetheintelligencecommunitycreatesananalyticforcemultiplier."53This

presentsamomentofchoiceforacademicscholarsinapositiontorespondto

Doney'sinvitation;itisanopportunitytoconvertscholarlyexpertiseintoan

"analyticforcemultiplier."

Inreflexivelyponderingthisinvitation,itmaybevaluableforscholarsto

bearinmindLangdonWinner'smaximthat"technologicalartifactshavepolitics,"54

sinceifGreeneandHicks'propositionthatswitch‐sidedebatingshouldbeviewedas

aculturaltechnology,thendebateinitiativesalsocarrypoliticalentailments.Inthe

caseofBRIDGE,thosepoliticalentailmentsarecoloredbythehistoryofintelligence

communitypoliciesandpractices.CommenterThomasLordputsthispointinhigh

reliefinapostofferedinresponsetoanewsstoryonthetopic:"Whyshouldthis

thing('BRIDGE')be?...[Theintelligencecommunity]ontheonehandsometimes

providesusefulinformationtothemilitaryortothecivilianbranchesandonthe

otherhanditisadangerous,outofcontrol,relicthatbyallexternalappearancesis

nottheslightestbitreformed,otherthansuperficially,fromsuchexcessesas

becameexposedintheCOINTELPROandMKULTRAhearingsofthe1970s."55A

debatescholarneednotagreewithLord'sfull‐throatedcriticismoftheintelligence

community(hegoesontoobservethatitbearsanalarmingresemblanceto

organizedcrime)tounderstandthatparticipationinthecommunity'sAnalytic

Outreachprogrammayservetheendsofdeliberation,butnotnecessarily

democracy,orevenadefensiblepolitics.Demand‐drivenrhetoricofscience

necessarilyraisesquestionsaboutwhat'sdrivingthedemand,questionsthat

scholarswithrelevantexpertisewoulddowelltopondercarefullybefore

53DanDoney,quotedinCarr,"BuildingBridges."54LangdonWinner,TheWhaleandtheReactor:ASearchforLimitsinanAgeofHigh

Technology(Chicago:UniversityofChicagoPress,1986),1955ThomasLord,commentonCarr,"BuildingBridges,"April22,2009.

17

embracinginvitationstocontributetheirargumentativeexpertisetodeliberative

projects.Bythesametoken,itwouldbeprudenttobearinmindthatthe

technologicaldeterminismaboutswitch‐sidedebateendorsedbyGreeneandHicks

maytendtoflattenreflexiveassessmentsregardingthewisdomofsupportinga

givendebateinitiative—asthenextsectionillustrates,manifestdifferencesamong

initiativeswarrantcontext‐sensitivejudgmentsregardingthenormativepolitical

dimensionsfeaturedineachcase.

PublicDebatesintheEPAPolicyProcess

TheprecedinganalysisofU.S.intelligencecommunitydebatinginitiatives

highlightedhowanalystsarechallengedtodiscursivelynavigatetheheteroglossia

ofvastamountsofdifferentkindsofdataflowingthroughintelligencestreams.

Publicpolicyplannersaretestedinlikemannerwhentheyattempttostitch

togetherinstitutionalargumentsfromvariousandsundryinputsrangingfrom

experttestimony,historicalprecedent,andpubliccomment.Justasintelligence

managersfindthatalgorithmic,formalmethodsofanalysisoftendon'tworkwhenit

comestothetaskofinterpretingandsynthesizingcopiousamountsofdisparate

data,publicpolicyplannersencountersimilarchallenges.

Infact,the"argumentativeturn"inpublicpolicyplanningelaboratesan

approachtopublicpolicyanalysisthatforegroundsdeliberativeinterchangeand

criticalthinkingasalternativesto"decisionism,"theformulaicapplicationof

"objective"decisionalgorithmstothepublicpolicyprocess.56Statingthematter

plainly,Majonesuggests,"whetherinwrittenororalform,argumentiscentralinall

stagesofthepolicyprocess."57Accordingly,henotes,"wemissagreatdealifwetry

tounderstandpolicy‐makingsolelyintermsofpower,influence,andbargaining,to

theexclusionofdebateandargument."58Onecanseesimilarrationalesdriving

GoodwinandDavis'sEPAdebatingproject,wheredebatersareinvitedtoconduct

56GiandomenicoMajone,Evidence,Argument,&PersuasioninthePolicyProcess(New

Haven:YaleUniversityPress,1989),12‐20.57Majone,Evidence,ArgumentandPersuasion,5.58Majone,Evidence,ArgumentandPersuasion,2.

18

on‐sitepublicdebatescoveringresolutionscraftedtoreflectkeypointsofstasisin

theEPAdecision‐makingprocess.Forexample,inthe2008"WaterWars"debates

heldatEPAheadquartersinWashington,D.C.,resolutionswerecraftedtofocus

attentiononthetopicofwaterpollution,withoneresolutionfocusingon

downstreamstates'authoritytocontrolupstreamstates’dischargesandsourcesof

pollutants;andasecondresolutionexploringthepolicymeritsofbottledwaterand

toiletpapertaxesasrevenuesourcestofundfinancewaterinfrastructureprojects.

Inthefirstdebateoninterstateriverpollution,theteamofSethGannonand

SeungwonChungfromWakeForestUniversityarguedinfavorofdownstreamstate

control,withtheMichiganStateUniversityteamofCarlyWunderlichandGarrett

Abelkopprovidingopposition.Intheseconddebateontaxationpolicy,Kevin

KallmyerandMatthewStruthfromMaryWashingtonUniversitydefendedtaxeson

bottledwaterandtoiletpaper,whiletheiropponentsfromHowardUniversity,

DominiqueScottandJarredMcKee,arguedagainstthisproposal.Reflectingonthe

project,Goodwinnotedhowtheintercollegiatedebaters'abilitytoactas"honest

brokers"inthepolicyargumentscontributedpositivelytointernalEPAdeliberation

onbothissues.59Davisobservedthatsincetheinviteddebaters"didn'thaveadogin

thefight,"theywereabletogivevoicetopreviouslyburiedargumentsthatsome

EPAsubjectmatterexpertsfeltreticenttoelucidate,becauseoftheirinstitutional

affiliations.60

Suchfindingsareconsistentwiththeviewsofpolicyanalystsadvocatingthe

"argumentativeturn"inpolicyplanning.AsMajoneclaims,"dialectical

confrontationbetweengeneralistsandexpertsoftensucceedsinbringingout

unstatedassumptions,conflictinginterpretationsofthefacts,andtherisksposedby

newprojects."61FrankFischergoesevenfurtherinthiscontext,explicitly

59IbrahimGoodwin,personalcorrespondencewithGordonMitchell,July21,2009.60JohnDavis,personalcorrespondencewithGordonMitchell,June7,2009.Inpersonal

correspondencewithGordonMitchellonAugust4,2009,debaterSethGannonreinforcedthisnotion:"OurEPAaudienceexpressedgreatthanksforadebateonthemeritsoftheirpoliciesthatwasinvestedonlyinthedebateprocessandnotanyparticularinterests."

61Majone,Evidence,ArgumentandPersuasion,5.

19

appropriatingrhetoricalscholarCharlesWillard'sconceptofargumentative

"epistemics"tofleshouthisvisionforpolicystudies:

Uncoveringtheepistemicdynamicsofpubliccontroversieswould

allowforamoreenlightenedunderstandingofwhatisatstakeina

particulardispute,makingpossibleasophisticatedevaluationofthe

variousviewpointsandmeritsofdifferentpolicyoptions.Insodoing,

thediffering,oftentacitlyheldcontextualperspectivesandvalues

couldbejuxtaposed;theviewpointsanddemandsofexperts,special

interestgroups,andthewiderpubliccouldbedirectlycompared;and

thedynamicsamongtheparticipantscouldbescrutizined.Thiswould

bynomeanssidelineorevenexcludescientificassessment;itwould

onlysituateitwithintheframeworkofamorecomprehensive

evaluation.62

AsDavisnotes,institutionalconstraintspresentwithintheEPA

communicativemilieucancomplicateeffortstoprovideafullairingofallrelevant

argumentspertainingtoagivenregulatoryissue.Thus,intercollegiatedebaterscan

playkeyrolesinretrievingandamplifyingpositionsthatmightotherwiseremain

sedimentedinthepolicyprocess.Thedynamicsentailedinthissymbiotic

relationshipareunderscoredbydeliberativeplannerJohnForester,whoobserves,

"Ifplannersandpublicadministratorsaretomakedemocraticpoliticaldebateand

argumentpossible,theywillneedstrategicallylocatedalliestoavoidbeingfully

thwartedbythecharacteristicself‐protectingbehaviorsoftheplanning

62FrankFischer,Citizens,ExpertsandtheEnvironment:ThePoliticsofLocalKnowledge

(Durham:DukeUniversityPress,2000),257;CharlesArthurWillard,LiberalismandtheProblemofKnowledge:ANewRhetoricforModernDemocracy(Chicago:UniversityofChicagoPress,1996).Fischergoesontospelloutoneimplicationflowingfromthislineofthinking,thatpolicyanalysts"mustdevelopaquitedifferentsetofskills....Beyondacompetentgraspofempirical‐analyticskills,heorsherequiresaswelltheabilitytoeffectivelyshareandconveyinformationtothelargerpublic.Inthissense,theanalystisasmuchaneducatorasasubstantivepolicyexpert.Thepedagogicaltaskistohelppeopleseeandteaseouttheassumptionsandconflictsunderlyingparticularpolicypositions,aswellastheconsequencesofresolvingtheminonewayoranother"(Fischer,Citizens,ExpertsandtheEnvironment,261).Forrelatedanalysisofthisthemeinthecontextofaprogrammaticefforttointegrateargumentationtheorywithsciencestudies,seeWilliamRehg,CogentScienceinContext:TheScienceWars,ArgumentationTheory,andHabermas(Cambridge,MA:MITPress,2009).

20

organizationsandbureaucracieswithinwhichtheywork."63Here,aninstitution's

needfor"strategicallylocatedallies"tosupportdeliberativepracticeconstitutesthe

demandforrhetoricallyinformedexpertise,settingupwhatcanbeconsidered

"demand‐driven"rhetoricofscience.Asaninstanceofrhetoricofscience

scholarship,thistypeof"switch‐sidepublicdebate"64differsbothfrominsular

contesttournamentdebating,wherethemainfocusisonthepedagogicalbenefitfor

studentparticipants,andfirst‐generationrhetoricofsciencescholarship,where

criticsconcentratedonunmaskingtherhetoricityofscientificartifactscirculatingin

whatmanyperceivedtobepurelytechnicalspheresofknowledgeproduction.65As

aformofdemand‐drivenrhetoricofscience,switch‐sidesdebatingconnects

directlywiththecommunicationfield'sperformativetraditionofargumentative

engagementinpubliccontroversy—adifferentrouteoftheoreticalgroundingthan

rhetoricalcriticism'stendencytolocateitsfoundationsintheEnglishfield's

traditionofliterarycriticismandtextualanalysis.66

Giventhisgeneaology,itisnotsurprisingtolearnhowDavis'responsetothe

EPA'sinstitutionalneedforrhetoricalexpertisetooktheformofapublicdebate

proposal,shapedbyDavis'dualbackgroundasapractitionerandhistorianof

intercollegiatedebate.Daviscompetedasanundergraduatepolicydebaterfor

63JohnForester,CriticalTheory,PublicPolicy,andPlanningPractice:TowardaCriticalPragmatism(Albany:StateUniversityofNewYorkPress,1993),59.Specifically,inCriticalTheory,Forestersuggests"spreadingdesignresponsibility"and"promotingcriticallyconstructivedesignandpolicycriticism"asmechanismsforpolicyplannerstoincorporateargumentationintotheirprofessionalpractices(29).Inthecontextofscientificinquiry,SteveFullermakessimilarpointsinhisbooksSocialEpistemology(Bloomington:IndianaUniversityPress,1991);andTheGovernanceofScience:IdeologyandtheFutureoftheOpenSociety(Buckingham:OpenUniversityPress,2000).

64AsJaneMunksgaardandDamienPfisterobserve,whenpursuedinthecontextofpublicdebate,"switch‐sidesdebatingrepresentstheultimateconsiderationofvariousperspectives.Studentsmustdointensiveresearchandreadingtoinformthemselvesofvarioussidesofanissue...crediblyadvancethoseviewsasadvocates,andrebuildtheirpositionsthroughcross‐examinationandrebuttal.Switch‐sidesdebatingdisplaysthepossibilitiesofintellectualengagementasaprocessofunderstanding,notcombat.Carefulconsiderationofothers'opinionsreshapesthemetaphorofargumentaswarintoametaphorofcollaboration"(seetheiressay,"ThePublicDebater'sRoleinAdvancingDeliberation:TowardsSwitch‐SidesPublicDebate,"inCriticalProblemsinArgumentation,ed.CharlesWillard,[Washington,D.C.:NCA,2003],506).

65SeeHarris,LandmarkEssays.66SuchgroundingmayhelpeasedisciplinaryanxietiesraisedbycommentatorssuchasLeah

Ceccarelli,whopaintsadimpictureregardingrhetoricofscience'spotentialforscholarlyandpolicyimpactbeyondthefieldofcommunication;seeher“AHardLookatOurselves:AReceptionStudyofRhetoricofScience,"TechnicalCommunicationQuarterly,14(2005):257‐65.

21

HowardUniversityinthe1970s,andthenwentonenjoysubstantialsuccessas

coachoftheHowardteaminthenewmillennium.Inanessayreviewingthebroad

sweepofdebatinghistory,Davisnotes,"Academicdebatebeganatleast2,400years

agowhenthescholarProtagorasofAbdera(481‐411B.C.),knownasthefatherof

debate,conducteddebatesamonghisstudentsinAthens."67AsJohnPoulakospoints

out,"older"SophistssuchasProtagorastaughtGreekstudentsthevalueofdissoi

logoi,orpullingapartcomplexquestionsbydebatingtwosidesofanissue.68The

fewsurvivingfragmentsofProtagoras'worksuggestthathisnotionofdissoilogoi

stoodfortheprinciplethat"twoaccounts[logoi]arepresentaboutevery'thing,'

opposedtoeachother,"69andfurther,thathumanscould"measure"70therelative

soundnessofknowledgeclaimsbyengagingingive‐and‐takewherepartieswould

makethe"weakerargumentstronger"toactivatethegenerativeaspectofrhetorical

practice,akeyelementoftheSophisticaltradition.71

FollowinginProtagoras'wake,Isocrateswouldcomplementthiscentrifugal

pushwiththepullofsynerchésthé,acentripetalexerciseof"comingtogether

deliberatively"tolisten,respond,andformcommonsocialbonds.72Isocrates

incorporatedProtagoreandissoilogoiintosynerchésthé("comingtogether

deliberately"),abroaderconceptthatheusedflexiblytoexpressinterlockingsenses

of1)inquiry,asingroupsconveningtosearchforanswerstocommonquestions

throughdiscussion;732)deliberation,withinterlocutorsgatheringinapolitical

settingtodeliberateaboutproposedcoursesofaction;74and3)allianceformation,a

67JohnW.Davis,"WordsasWeapons,"DebateSolutionswebsite,December5,2007,

http://www.debatesolutions.com.68Sprague,ed.,TheOlderSophists,2ded.;seealsoJohnPoulakos,"RhetoricandCivic

Education,"81‐82.69Schiappa,ProtagorasanLogos,100.70Schiappa,ProtagorasandLogos,117‐133.71Schiappa,ProtagorasandLogos,103‐116.72EkaterinaHaskins,LogosandPowerinIsocratesandAristotle(Columbia,SC:Universityof

SouthCarolinaPress,1997),88.73Isocrates,Panathenaicus,trans.GeorgeNorlin,vol.2,LoebClassicalLibrary(London:

WilliamHeinemann,1929),14,76.74Isocrates,Nicocles,19,OnthePeace,trans.GeorgeNorlin,LoebClassicalLibrary,vol.2

(London:WilliamHeinemann,1929),2,9.

22

formofcollectiveactiontypicalatfestivals,75orintheexchangeofpledgesthat

deepensocialties.76

ReturningonceagaintotheKettering‐informedsharpdistinctionbetween

debateanddeliberation,oneseesinIsocraticsynerchésthé,aswellastheEPA

debatinginitiative,afusionofdebatewithdeliberativefunctions.Echoingatheme

raisedinthisessay'searlierdiscussionofintelligencetradecraft,suchafusion

troublescategoricalattemptstoclassifydebateanddeliberationasfundamentally

opposedactivities.Thesignificanceofsuchafindingisamplifiedbythefrequencyof

attemptsinthedeliberativedemocracyliteraturetoinsistonthetheoretical

bifurcationofdebateanddeliberationasanarticleoftheoreticalfaith.

TandemanalysisoftheEPAandintelligencecommunitydebatinginitiatives

alsobringstolightdimensionsofcontrastatthethirdlevelofIsocratic

synerchésthé,allianceformation.Theintelligencecommunity'sAnalyticOutreach

initiativeinviteslargelyone‐waycommunicationflowingfromoutsideexpertsinto

theblackboxofclassifiedintelligenceanalysis.Onthecontrary,theEPAdebating

programgesturestowardamoreexpansiveprojectofdeliberativealliancebuilding.

Inthisvein,HowardUniversity'sparticipationinthe2008EPA"WaterWars"

debatescanbeseenastheharbingerofatrendbyHistoricallyBlackCollegesand

Universities(HBCUs)tocatalyzetheirdebateprogramsinastrategythatevinces

Davis'dual‐focusvision.Ontheonehand,DavisaimstorecuperateWileyCollege's

traditionofcompetitiveexcellenceinintercollegiatedebatedepictedsopowerfully

inthefeaturefilmTheGreatDebaters,bystartingawaveofnewdebateprograms

housedinHBCUsacrossthenation.77Ontheotherhand,Davisseespotentialfor

75Isocrates,Panathenaicus,146,Panegyricus,trans.GeorgeNorlin,vol.1,LoebClassical

Library(London:WilliamHeinemann,1928),81.76Isocrates,Panegyricus,43,Helen,trans.LarueVanHook,vol.3,LoebClassicalLibrary

(London:WilliamHeinemann,1945),40,AgainstCallimachus,trans.LarueVanHook,vol.3,LoebClassicalLibrary(London:WilliamHeinemann,1945),45;seealsoTakisPoulakos,SpeakingforthePolis:Isocrates'RhetoricalEducation(Columbia,SC:UniversityofSouthCarolinaPress,1997),19;Haskins,LogosandPower,8;andKathleenE.Welch,ElectricRhetoric:ClassicalRhetoric,OralismandaNewLiteracy(Cambridge,MA:MITPress,1999).

77TheGreatDebaters(Chicago:HarperProductions,2007).TimothyM.O'Donnellprovidesinsightfulcommentaryonthehistoricalandprospectivesignificanceofthisfilmin"'TheGreatDebaters':AChallengetoHigherEducation,"hisJanuary7,2008articleforInsideHigherEducation,http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2008/01/07/odonnell;aswellashis"ThePittsburgh

23

thesenewprogramstocomplementtheircompetitivedebateprogrammingwith

participationintheEPA'spublicdebatinginitiative.Thisdual‐focusvisionrecalls

DouglasEhningerandWayneBrockriede'svisionof"total"debateprogramsthat

blendswitch‐sidesintercollegiatetournamentdebatingwithformsofpublicdebate

designedtocontributetowidercommunitiesbeyondthetournamentsetting.78

WhilethepoliticaltelosanimatingDavis'dual‐focusvisioncertainlyembraces

backgroundassumptionsthatGreeneandHickswouldfinddisconcerting(e.g.

notionsofliberalpoliticalagency,theideaofdebateusing"wordsasweapons"),79

thereislittledoubtthattheprojectofpursuingenvironmentalprotectionby

tappingthecreativeenergyofHBCU‐leverageddissoilogoidifferssignificantlyfrom

theintelligencecommunity'sefforttoimproveitstradecraftthroughonlinedigital

debateprogramming.SuchdifferenceisespeciallyevidentinlightoftheEPA's

commitmenttoextenddebatestopublicrealms,withtheattendantpossible

benefitsunpackedbyJaneMunksgaardandDamienPfister:

Havingapublicdebaterargueagainsttheirconvictions,orconfess

theirindecisiononasubjectandsubsequentembraceofargumentas

awaytoseekclarity,couldshakeuptheprevailingviewofdebateasa

warofwords.Publicuptakeofthepossibilityofswitch‐sidesdebate

mayhelplessenthepolarizationofissuesinherentinprevailing

debateformatsbecausestudentsarenolongerseenasweddedto

theirarguments.Thiscouldtransformpublicdebatefromatussle

betweenadvocates,witheachpublicdebatertryingtoconvincethe

audienceinaManicheanstruggleaboutthetruthoftheirside,toa

Debaters,"anarticlepublishedinThePittsburghPost‐Gazette,December30,2007,http://www.post‐gazette.com/pg/07364/845125‐109.stm.

78DouglasEhningerandWayneBrockriede,DecisionbyDebate(NewYork:Dodd,Mead&Co.,1963).Forrelatedcommentaryontheentwinementofdebatetournamentcompetitionandpublicdebating,seeGordonR.MitchellandTakeshiSuzuki,"Beyondthe'DailyMe':ArgumentationinanAgeofEnclaveDeliberation,"inArgumentationandSocialCognition,ed.TakeshiSuzuki,YoshiroYano,andTakayukiKato(Tokyo,JapanDebateAssociation,2004),160‐166;andJoeMiller,Cross‐X(NewYork:Farrar,StraussandGiroux,2006),470‐478.

79SeeDavis,"WordsasWeapons."

24

moreinvitingexchangefocusedonthecontentoftheother's

argumentationandtheprocessofdeliberativeexchange.80

ReflectionontheEPAdebatinginitiativerevealsastrikingconvergence

betweentheexpressedneedfordissoilogoibygovernmentagencyofficials

wrestlingwiththechallengesofinvertedrhetoricalsituations;theoreticalclaimsby

scholarsregardingthecentralityofargumentationinthepublicpolicyprocess;and

thepracticalwherewithalofintercollegiatedebaterstotailorpublicswitch‐side

debatingperformancesinspecificwaysrequestedbyagencycollaborators.These

pointsofconvergenceunderscorepreviouslyarticulatedtheoreticalassertions

regardingtherelationshipofdebatetodeliberation,aswellasdeepen

understandingofthepoliticalroleofdeliberationininstitutionaldecision‐making.

Buttheyalsosuggesthowdecisionsbyrhetoricalscholarsaboutwhetherto

contributeswitch‐sidedebatingacumentomeetdemand‐drivenrhetoricofscience

initiativesoughttoinvolvecarefulreflection.Suchanapproachmirrorstheway

policyplanninginthe"argumentativeturn"isdesignedtorespondtothe

weaknessesofformal,decisionisticparadigmsofpolicyplanningwithsituated,

contingentjudgmentsinformedbyreflectivedeliberation.

Conclusion

DilipGaonkar'scriticismoffirst‐generationrhetoricofsciencescholarship

restsonakeyclaimregardingwhatheseesastheinherent"thinness"oftheancient

Greekrhetoricallexicon.81Thatlexicon,byvirtueofthefactthatitwasinvented

primarilytoteachrhetoricalperformance,isill‐equippedtosupportthekindof

nuanceddiscriminationsrequiredforeffectiveinterpretationandcritiqueof

rhetoricaltexts.WhileGaonkarisolatesrhetoricofscienceasamaintargetofthis

critique,hischoiceofsubjectmatterpositionshimtotogglebackandforthbetween

specificengagementwithrhetoricofsciencescholarshipanddiscussionofbroader

80MunksgaardandPfister,"PublicDebater'sRole,"507.81Gaonkar,"TheIdeaofRhetoric."Forasurveyofearlyrhetoricofsciencescholarship,see

RandyAllenHarris,ed.,LandmarkEssaysonRhetoricofScience:CaseStudies(Mahwah,NJ:LawrenceErlbaumAssociates,1997).

25

themestouchingonthemeta‐theoreticalcontroversyoverrhetoric'sproperscope

asafieldofinquiry(theso‐called"big"vs."little"rhetoricdispute).82Gaonkar's

familiarrefraininbothcontextsisawarningaboutthedangersof"universalizing"

or"globalizing"rhetoricalinquiry,especiallyinattemptsthat"stretch"theclassical

Greekrhetoricalvocabularyintoahermeneuticmetadiscourse,onepressedinto

serviceasamasterkeyforinterpretationofanyandalltypesofcommunicative

artifacts.Inotherwords,Gaonkarwarnsagainstthedangersofrhetoricians

pursuingwhatmightbecalled"supply‐sideepistemology,"rhetoric'sprojectof

pushingforgreaterdisciplinaryrelevancebyattemptingtoextenditsreachintofar‐

flungareasofinquirysuchasthehardsciences.

Yetthisessayhighlightshowrhetoricalscholarship'srelevancecanbe

crediblyestablishedbyoutsiders,whoseekaccesstothecreativeenergyflowing

fromtheclassicalGreekrhetoricallexiconinitsnativemode,thatisasatoolof

inventiondesignedtospurandhonerhetoricalperformance.Analysisofthe

intelligencecommunityandEPAdebatinginitiativesshowshowthisisthecase,

withgovernmentagenciescallingforassistancetoanimaterhetoricalprocesses

suchasdissoilogoi(debatingdifferentsides)andsynérchesthé,theperformative

taskofcomingtogetherdeliberatelyforthepurposeofjointinquiry,collective

choice‐making,andrenewalofcommunicativebonds.Thisdemand‐driven

epistemologyisdifferentinkindfromthe"globalization"projectsoroundly

criticizedbyGaonkar.Ratherthanrhetoricventuringoutfromitsownacademic

hometoproselytizeaboutitsepistemologicaluniversalityforallknowers,instead

herewehaveactorsnotformallytrainedintherhetoricaltraditionarticulatinghow

theirowndeliberativeobjectivescallforincorporationofrhetoricalpractice,and

evenrecruitmentof"strategicallylocatedallies"83toassistintheprocess.Sincethe

productivistcontentintheclassicalGreekvocabularyservesasacriticalresource

82EdwardSchiappa,"SecondThoughtsontheCritiquesofBigRhetoric,"Philosophyand

Rhetoric34(2001):260‐274;seealsotheessaysinHerbertW.Simons'seditedvolume,TheRhetoricalTurn:InventionandPersuasionintheConductofInquiry(Chicago:UniversityofChicagoPress,1990).

83Forester,CriticalTheory,59.

26

forjointcollaborationinthisregard,demand‐drivenrhetoricofscienceturns

Gaonkar'soriginalcritiqueonitshead.

InfairnesstoGaonkar,itshouldbestipulatedthathis1993intervention

challengedthewayrhetoricofsciencehadbeendonetodate,nottheuniverseof

waysrhetoricofsciencemightbedoneinthefuture.Andtohispartialcredit(hedid

thisinafootnote),Gaonkardidacknowledgethepromiseofaperformance‐oriented

rhetoricofscience,especiallyoneinformedbyclassicalthinkersotherthan

Aristotle.84InhisPh.D.dissertationon"AspectsofSophisticPedagogy,"85Gaonkar

documentshowtheancientsophistswere"thegreatestchampions"of"socially

useful"science,86andalsohowthesophistsessentiallypracticedtheartofrhetoric

inatranslational,performativeregister:

Thesophistscouldnotblithelygoabouttheirbusinessofmaking

scienceuseful,whilescienceitselfstoodstillduetolackofcommunal

supportandrecognition.Besides,sophisticpedagogywasbecoming

increasinglydependentonthefindingsofcontemporaryspeculation

inphilosophyandscience.Takeforinstance,theeminentlypractical

artofrhetoric.Astaughtbythebestofthesophists,itwasnotsimply

ahandbookofrecipeswhichanyonecouldmechanicallyemploytohis

advantage.Onthecontrary,thestrengthandvitalityofsophistic

rhetoriccamefromtheirabilitytoincorporatetherelevant

informationobtainedfromtheon‐goingresearchinotherfields.87

Ofcoursedeeptrans‐historicaldifferencesmakeuncriticalappropriationof

classicalGreekrhetoricforcontemporaryuseafool'serrand.Buttogaugefrom

RobertHariman'srecentreflectionsontheenduringsalienceofIsocrates,"timely,

suitable,andelegantappropriations"canhelpuspost‐moderns"forgeanew

politicallanguage"suitableforaddressingthecomplexraftofintertwinedproblems

84Gaonkar,"TheIdeaofRhetoric,"note3,78.85DilipParameshwarGaonkar,"AspectsofSophisticPedagogy,"unpublishedPh.D.diss.,

UniversityofPittsburgh,Pittsburgh,Pennsylvania,1984.86Gaonkar,"AspectsofSophisticPedagogy,"121.87Gaonkar,"AspectsofSophisticPedagogy,"248,emphasisadded.

27

facingglobalsociety.88Suchretrospectionislongoverdue,saysHariman,as"the

history,literature,philosophy,oratory,art,andpoliticalthoughtofGreeceand

Romehaveneverbeenmoreaccessibleorlessappreciated."89

Thisessayhasexploredwaysthatsomeofthemostvenerableelementsof

theancientGreekrhetoricaltradition—thosedealingwithdebateand

deliberation—canberetrievedandadaptedtoanswercallsinthecontemporary

milieufor"culturaltechnologies"capableofdealingwithoneofourtime'smost

dauntingchallenges.Thischallengeinvolvesfindingmeaningininvertedrhetorical

situationscharacterizedbyanendemicsurplusofheterogeneouscontent.

88RobertHariman,"CivicEducation,ClassicalImitation,andDemocraticPolity,"inIsocrates

andCivicEducation,228.89Hariman,"CivicEducation,"217.