1. always apologize after an argument 2. be yourself dont try to act cool just to be somones friend 3. a good friend is your friend no matter what happens
I believe that argument is good for a good friendship as you can freely say what you feel and there is no restrictions..
Positive friendship is when you are really good friends with someone. A good friendship is when you have: Trust, understanding of one another, facts about them, having fun all the time together. Just doing things friends do and you both enjoy.
Firstly, you have to back-track about what the argument was about and see if it was your fault or theirs. Sometimes 'agreeing to disagree' and taking someone else's opinion depending if it is a good one is better that debating and getting into an argument. It takes a big person and a mature one to apologize to their friend even if their friend was wrong. Losing a friendship over an argument is not wise. Throughout a friendship there may be many arguments, but that does not mean the friendship has to come to an end.
An invalid argument is when the facts you are using are invalid or your forms of defense are wrong or incorrect, a valid argument is the opposite of an invalid argument. "There is a windmill in my beard. your argument is invalid." (This is a good example of a bad contradiction)
using facts, examples makes an argument strong
Generally when people argue, they argue by comparing the facts that they have. The person whose facts are more compelling wins the argument. An ignorant person does not know any facts. A person who argues with no facts argues with emotion or opinion based on nothing that can be checked or verified by the other side. It is not possible to argue against nothing (no facts.) So while a person who has no facts to bolster his argument can continue arguing, it is a fruitless argument; hence, you can't argue with ignorance. The ignorant person may walk away from an argument believing himself or herself to have won -- not because he or she had the better argument based on facts that could be checked by the other side - but because he or she used opinion or feelings to bolster his or her "argument."
sound premises + strong facts + strong conclusion = effective solid argument
valid = based on good reasons or facts that are true: Actually, in logic, a valid argument is one where the premises lead to the conclusion, whether or not the premises (facts it is based on) are true. For example, the argument "All Presidents of the United States have green skin; Lady Gaga is a President of the United States and therefore has green skin" is a valid argument, notwithstanding the facts that US Presidents don't have green skin and Lady Gaga is not a US President.
either solve the argument or if they have a good cause then let them stop being friends
An argument uses facts, emotions, and credibility to persuade an audience to believe something.
There is no argument - it happened.
Here's how to present a good argument:Write down what your side of the argument is going to be.Research -- look up facts that support your side.Place those facts into an order that seems logical to you.Write the facts into complete sentences and use one paragraph to explain each fact.Write out an introduction where you say what your side is and that you're going to show why people should agree with you.Write out a conclusion where you summarize what you've just said and then say something such as "and that is why you should agree that ___"