Create an own original 3-line argument that contains the following (please list with bullets as you see
Question:
Create an own original 3-line argument that contains the following (please list with bullets as you see below): Premise 1 Premise 2 A conclusion The argument should be relevant to your life in some meaningful wayrelevance to some issue you care about, something that happened in your life, your potential future career, etc. By contrast, it shouldn't be one of these silly, made up examples you see in class or text about an inane subject like a person who doesn't exist or a mostly irrelevant events/objects. The argument you create doesn't have to be a particularly good/effective argument (we're not there yet in the course!), but it should be clear that it's an argument and not something else. Using the MAPS Handbook reading(s) explain to the reader why this is an argument, why the two first statements are categorized as premises and why the 3rd is a conclusion. Differentiate the argument you've created from two (not all three) of the following: (a) an unsupported assertion, (b) a report, and (c) an explanation. Devise your own original examples of the two types of non-arguments you select and clearly explain why these examples are in a different category the argument you created.