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There are three components in a logical argument: 1) reasons, 2) evidence, and 3) conclusions. Conclusions answer which questions?

1) Why? Why should the audience of the argument think or do something?
2) How do you know? Is there support for this? Facts? Data? Stories?
3) What? What does the persuader want the hearer to think or do?

User Graywolf
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Final answer:

In a logical argument, the conclusion answers the question of what the persuader wants the hearer to think or do.

Step-by-step explanation:

In a logical argument, conclusions answer the question "What does the persuader want the hearer to think or do?" The conclusion is the main claim or belief that the arguer wants the audience to accept. It represents the final result or outcome that the argument is trying to persuade the audience to believe or act upon.

User Mark K Cowan
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