Practical · Argumentation

How to Structure an Argument

The complete architecture of effective argument; claims, evidence, warrants, counterarguments, and conclusions; with the Toulmin model and classical arrangement.

9 min readBy Compelle EditorsUpdated 2026

An argument is not a collection of assertions about a subject; it is a structured inferential relationship between evidence and conclusion, designed to bring a specific audience to a specific belief or action through rational means. Getting that structure right is the difference between communication that persuades and communication that merely expresses. This guide provides two complementary frameworks for argument structure: the Toulmin model (which analyzes individual arguments at the micro level) and the classical arrangement (which organizes a complete argumentative text at the macro level).

The Toulmin Model: The Architecture of a Single Argument

Stephen Toulmin's model of argument identifies six elements that together constitute a complete, well-formed argument:

C
Claim
The conclusion you are arguing for; the specific belief or action you want the audience to accept. The claim must be specific, arguable, and significant. "Climate change is a problem" is not a useful claim. "Carbon pricing is more effective than command-and-control regulation at reducing industrial emissions" is a claim.
D
Data (Grounds)
The evidence that supports the claim; the facts, statistics, expert testimony, and observed instances that give the claim its empirical basis. Data must be accurate, relevant, and sufficient. Weak data; a single anecdote, outdated statistics, cherry-picked examples; produces weak arguments even when the claim itself is correct.
W
Warrant
The general principle that licenses the inferential move from data to claim; the reason why this evidence supports this conclusion rather than some other. Warrants are often implicit, which makes them dangerous: an argument's most contestable assumption is often its unstated warrant. Making warrants explicit allows both you and your audience to examine whether the inference is valid.
Q
Qualifier
A modal term indicating the strength of the claim; "probably," "in most cases," "under these conditions." Good arguers claim only as much as their evidence warrants. Overreaching; claiming certainty where the evidence supports only probability; undermines credibility when the overclaim is challenged.
R
Rebuttal
The conditions under which the claim would not hold; the exceptions, the counter-evidence, the circumstances that limit the argument's scope. Acknowledging rebuttals is not weakness; it is intellectual honesty that strengthens overall credibility. The argument "X is true except in conditions Y and Z" is more credible than the argument "X is always true."
B
Backing
Support for the warrant itself; needed when the audience would not accept the warrant as self-evident. If the warrant is "comparative international evidence is a reliable guide to domestic policy effectiveness," and the audience would contest this, backing must be provided.

Classical Arrangement: Organizing the Complete Argument

For a complete argumentative essay or speech, classical rhetoric's six-part arrangement provides a reliable macro-structure. Apply it flexibly rather than mechanically:

The Most Common Structural Error

Burying the claim. Many writers and speakers develop all their evidence before stating what they are trying to prove; making the audience wait through the argument without knowing where it is going. State your claim early and clearly, then prove it. The audience should never be uncertain about what you are arguing.

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