The pace of reading, clearly, depends entirely upon the reader. He may read as slowly or as rapidly as he can or wishes to read

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The pace of reading, clearly, depends entirely upon the reader. He may
read as slowly or as rapidly as he can or wishes to read. If he does
not understand something, he may stop and reread it, or go in search
of elucidation before continuing. The reader can accelerate his pace
when the material is easy or less than interesting, and can slow down
when it is difficult or enthralling. If what he reads is moving he can
put down the book for a few moments and cope with his emotions without
fear of losing anything. (Marie Winn, The Plug-In Drug)




In my reasoning module, we are presented with this passage (taken from hurley) and to deduce if it is an argument. We discussed and the professor said it is an argument with the conclusion being the first sentence. But when I look at the solutions online answered by other people (chegg), it says it isnt an argument. May I know is it really an argument?









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    The pace of reading, clearly, depends entirely upon the reader. He may
    read as slowly or as rapidly as he can or wishes to read. If he does
    not understand something, he may stop and reread it, or go in search
    of elucidation before continuing. The reader can accelerate his pace
    when the material is easy or less than interesting, and can slow down
    when it is difficult or enthralling. If what he reads is moving he can
    put down the book for a few moments and cope with his emotions without
    fear of losing anything. (Marie Winn, The Plug-In Drug)




    In my reasoning module, we are presented with this passage (taken from hurley) and to deduce if it is an argument. We discussed and the professor said it is an argument with the conclusion being the first sentence. But when I look at the solutions online answered by other people (chegg), it says it isnt an argument. May I know is it really an argument?









    share









    New contributor




    ilovewt is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.





















      up vote
      1
      down vote

      favorite









      up vote
      1
      down vote

      favorite












      The pace of reading, clearly, depends entirely upon the reader. He may
      read as slowly or as rapidly as he can or wishes to read. If he does
      not understand something, he may stop and reread it, or go in search
      of elucidation before continuing. The reader can accelerate his pace
      when the material is easy or less than interesting, and can slow down
      when it is difficult or enthralling. If what he reads is moving he can
      put down the book for a few moments and cope with his emotions without
      fear of losing anything. (Marie Winn, The Plug-In Drug)




      In my reasoning module, we are presented with this passage (taken from hurley) and to deduce if it is an argument. We discussed and the professor said it is an argument with the conclusion being the first sentence. But when I look at the solutions online answered by other people (chegg), it says it isnt an argument. May I know is it really an argument?









      share









      New contributor




      ilovewt is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.












      The pace of reading, clearly, depends entirely upon the reader. He may
      read as slowly or as rapidly as he can or wishes to read. If he does
      not understand something, he may stop and reread it, or go in search
      of elucidation before continuing. The reader can accelerate his pace
      when the material is easy or less than interesting, and can slow down
      when it is difficult or enthralling. If what he reads is moving he can
      put down the book for a few moments and cope with his emotions without
      fear of losing anything. (Marie Winn, The Plug-In Drug)




      In my reasoning module, we are presented with this passage (taken from hurley) and to deduce if it is an argument. We discussed and the professor said it is an argument with the conclusion being the first sentence. But when I look at the solutions online answered by other people (chegg), it says it isnt an argument. May I know is it really an argument?







      logic argumentation





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      share









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      edited Sep 9 at 12:44









      Mauro ALLEGRANZA

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      25.1k21756






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      asked Sep 9 at 12:12









      ilovewt

      1104




      1104




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      ilovewt is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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          A possible analysis, based on the first two sentences :




          "The reader may read as slowly or as rapidly as he can or wishes to read. Therefore, the pace of reading depends entirely upon the reader."







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            active

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            up vote
            4
            down vote



            accepted










            A possible analysis, based on the first two sentences :




            "The reader may read as slowly or as rapidly as he can or wishes to read. Therefore, the pace of reading depends entirely upon the reader."







            share|improve this answer


























              up vote
              4
              down vote



              accepted










              A possible analysis, based on the first two sentences :




              "The reader may read as slowly or as rapidly as he can or wishes to read. Therefore, the pace of reading depends entirely upon the reader."







              share|improve this answer
























                up vote
                4
                down vote



                accepted







                up vote
                4
                down vote



                accepted






                A possible analysis, based on the first two sentences :




                "The reader may read as slowly or as rapidly as he can or wishes to read. Therefore, the pace of reading depends entirely upon the reader."







                share|improve this answer














                A possible analysis, based on the first two sentences :




                "The reader may read as slowly or as rapidly as he can or wishes to read. Therefore, the pace of reading depends entirely upon the reader."








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                share|improve this answer








                edited Sep 9 at 12:47

























                answered Sep 9 at 12:42









                Mauro ALLEGRANZA

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