Authors of articles accepted for publication in Informal Logicmust submit the publication version of the article in the following form. Accepted articles will not be scheduled for publication until an appropriately formatted version of the ms. has been received by the journal. Note the requirements for Notes, Citations and References listed below.

For articles accepted for publication, insert each author’s name, institution and postal address and email address immediately below the Title of the Paper and above the Abstract.

Paperssubmitted for publication inInformal Logicmust any remove all author-identifying references from the body, notes and References of the paper.

Typeface is Times New Roman; 12 point font unless otherwise indicated. In following the template, delete the instructions within the brackets.

[Template]

Title of the Paper [16 point font]

Abstract: [10 point font; 100 words maximum] Replace this sentence with the Abstract.

Keywords: [10 point font; up to 10 keywords, listed alphabetically, separated by commas, with caps only for the first letter of proper names, no terminal period] Replace this sentence with the list of Keywords

1. Introduction [Section numbers and headings in boldface. Cap only the first letter and the first letters of proper names; no terminal period.]

Insert the first paragraph of the section [no tab for the first paragraph].

Insert the second and later paragraphs of the section, first line of each indented by one tab. [Tabs are 0.3 in. or 1.0 cm throughout. Quotations and examples are set of by one blank line above and below and by 0.3 in. or 1.0 cm left and right indents.]

2. Heading of the second section

Insert the first paragraph of the second section [i.e., with no left indent].

Insert the second and later paragraphs of the second section [i.e., with one tab indent].

3. etc. Repeat the preceding format for each subsequent section of the paper.[1]

–. Conclusion [insert the appropriate section number]

Insert the first paragraph of the conclusion or summary [i.e., with no left indent].

Insert the second and later paragraphs of the conclusion or summary [i.e., with one tab indent].

Acknowledgements: Insert any acknowledgement(s). [Otherwise, delete this heading.]

References

See below for the conventions for the list of references for articles in Informal Logic

[End of Template]

Notes

Any notes must be footnotes; no endnotes. Footnotes, if any, should be few and brief. Lengthy asides to the reader should be incorporated as subsections within the text.

Citations

References must be citedwithin the body of the text (never in footnotes) by the author’s surname (or authors’ surnames) and year of publication in parentheses. No comma between name(s) and date. When desired, insert page numbers (p. 14; pp. 76-77) following a comma following the date. Do NOT use footnotes for citations. See the following examples.

Examples:

◦According to some, argumentation is a complex speech act (van Eemeren and Grootendorst 1984).

◦This view has been challenged by Govier (1988) and by Johnson (2000).

◦There is a growing literature on visual argument (Birdsell and Groarke 1996; Hill and Helmers et al. 2004; Roque 2005; Kjeldsen 2015).

◦Blair claims there can be purely visual arguments (1996, pp. 30-32).

References list

The list of references should only include works that are cited in the text and that have been published or accepted for publication. Personal communications and unpublished works should be mentioned only in the text.

◦Start the first line of each entry at the left margin, no blank line between entries.

◦Reference list entries should be alphabetized by the initial letter of the surname of the first author of each work. Names with prefixes (e.g., van Gelder or van Eemeren) should be listed among surnames names starting with the initial letter of the name following the prefix (e.g., van Gelder among the Gs, van Eemeren among the Es).

◦Journal names and book titles should be italicized.

◦Capitalize only the first letter of a book or article title, the first letter of the word following a colon, and the first letters of proper names.

◦Order the information, punctuate and leave spaces as in the following examples.

Examples:

◦Journal articles

Hample, Dale, Bing Han and David Payne. 2010. The aggressiveness of playful arguments. Argumentation 24(4): 405-421.

van den Hoven, Paul. 1997. The dilemma of normativity: How to interpret a rational reconstruction. Argumentation 11(2): 411-417.

Zarefsky, David. 2010. Turning points in the Galesburg debate. Argumentation and Advocacy 46(3): 140-149.

◦Books

van Eemeren, F. H., R. Grootendorst and T. Kruiger. 1984. The study of argumentation. New York. Irvington Publishers, Inc.

Hill, Charles A. and Marguerite Helmers, eds. 2004. Defining visual rhetorics. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.

◦Book chapters

Krabbe, Erik C. W. 1995. Appeal to ignorance. In Fallacies: Classical and contemporary readings, eds. Hans V. Hansen and Robert W. Pinto, 251-264. University Park, PA: The University of Pennsylvania Press.

◦Papers in published proceedings

van Belle, Hilda. 2007. When you don’t have anything to prove: Strategic manoeuvring and rhetorical argumentation. In Proceedings of the sixth conference of the International Society for the Study of Argumentation,eds. Frans H. van Eemeren, J. Anthony Blair, Charles A. Willard, Bart Garssen, 107-112. Amsterdam: SicSat.

◦Online documents

Groarke, Leo. 2015. Informal logic. In The Stanford encyclopedia of philosophy (summer

2015 edition), ed. Edward N. Zalta. URL accessed 14 December 2015:<

Quotation marks

Use double quotes for direct quotations and scare quotes, and to indicate any other USE of a term or phrase (e.g., ... the famous “red” scare of the 1950s). Use single quotes to indicate the MENTION of a term or phrase, and for quotations within quotations (e.g., ‘Red’ was spelled in the previous example without an upper-case ‘r’.).

Punctuation in relation to quotation marks and parentheses

All punctuation goes outside any close (right-hand) quotation mark or close (right-hand) parenthesis. A sentence’s terminal period follows the right-hand parenthesis around a citation. Correct: Woods introduced the term ‘the gang of eighteen’ (Woods 1985).

Incorrect: Woods introduced the term ‘the gang of eighteen’.(Woods 1985)

British vs. U.S. spellings

Either U.S. or British spelling conventions are acceptable, as long as the author uses one or the other consistently throughout. Thus 'labor', ‘judgment’ and ‘premise’ are acceptable, as are 'labour', ‘judgement’ and ‘premiss’. The spelling convention used in any passage directly quoted by the author should be retained, even if it differs from the convention the author uses in the article.

“Foreign” words

Words in languages other than English should normally be italicized. E.g., “He was awarded the prize as primum accessit”. “That’s a good example of secundum quid”.

1

[1] Any notes must be footnotes.