Title: Deductive logic
1Deductive logic
All generalizations are false, including this one
You do not reason a man out something that he was
not reasoned into
- What is it?
- How does it work?
- Why does it matter?
Critical reason is the only alternative to
violence so far discovered.
Logic is the beginning of wisdom, not the end
2An example..
Sherlock Holmes (the master of deductive logic)
speaking to a police officer about the theft of
an expensive racehorse Police Officer Holmes,
does any one aspect of the crime strike you as
significant? Holmes Yes, the curious incident
of the dog in the night time Police Officer
But the dog did nothing in the night
time! Holmes That was the curious incident!
3The deductive reasoning..
- Watchdogs bark at strangers
- The Watchdog did not bark at the thief
- Therefore the thief was not a stranger
4More examples..
- You know that you left your mobile phone either
in your pocket or on your desk - Your mobile isnt in your pocket
- Therefore it must be on your desk
5- You know that The West Lake in Hangzhou is a
fresh water lake - You know that sharks cannot live in fresh water
- Therefore there cannot be any sharks in the West
Lake
6The benefits?
- You dont have to check every single fresh water
lake to know that there arent any sharks in it
deductive logic tells you that there are no
sharks in any freshwater lakes.
7So what is deductive reasoning?
- Any form of reasoning that moves from the general
to the particular e.g. - All dogs are mammals
- Fido is a dog
- Therefore Fido.
Is a mammal
8Syllogisms
- The kind of deductive argument that we just
looked at is known as a syllogism - A syllogism consists of
- Two premises and a conclusion
- Three terms, each of which occurs twice (dogs,
mammals, fido) - Quantifiers such as all, some or no
9Truth Vs Valid which is this?
- All rocket scientists are stupid
- Bill Gates is a rocket scientist
- Therefore Bill Gates is stupid
10It is Valid!
- Both the PREMISES are false
- The CONCLUSION is false
- Yet the ARGUMENT ITSELF IS VALID!
11WHAT ABOUT THIS ONE..
- All tacos are teachers
- Mr. Wright is a taco
- Therefore Mr. Wright is a Teacher
12Valid
- Both the premises are false
- But the conclusion is true
- However the argument is still VALID
13This one?...
- All projectors require electricity
- This classroom has a projector
- Therefore this this classroom does not have a
projector
14INVALID
- The premises are both true
- The conclusion is false
- This is the one combination where the argument
MUST be invalid
15DIY make your own valid syllogisms
- Two true premises and a true conclusion
- One true premise, one false premise and a true
conclusion - One true premise, one false premise and a false
conclusion - Two false premises and a true conclusion
- Two false premises and a false conclusion
16Pure logic
- Concerned merely with the structure of arguments,
it doesnt matter if the premises are false, or
even meaningless! - All that matters is does the conclusion follow
logically from the premises. - E.g.
- All blims are blams
- Some blims are bloms
- Therefore some blams are bloms
17Aghhhh my head hurts! Algebra in TOK!
- All As are Bs
- Some As are Cs
- Therefore some Bs are Cs
18Whats the point?
- Removes belief bias
- Sometimes we tend to believe an argument is valid
because we already agree with the conclusion - E.g. Democrats are in favour of free speech
- Dictators are not Democrats
- Therefore all dictators are opposed to free
speech - This is NOT a valid argument
19Using Venn diagrams
- Refer to the photocopied information Venn
diagrams can be useful way of picturing a
Syllogism and determining whether an argument if
valid
20Enthymemes
- Incomplete arguments that exclude a premise
because it is considered obvious/assumed.
21Supply the missing premise for these enthymemes
- Jenny goes to Oxford University, so she must be
very intelligent - Drugs should be legalised because they only harm
the addict - Graham is a politician, so he is probably lying.
- Cheerleading should be an olympic event becauses
cheerleaders compete, train and have a high level
of physical fitness - Since it is natural to eat meat, there is nothing
morally wrong with it
22But where do our premises come from?
- INDUCTIVE REASONING!
- To be continued.
23Bibliography
- Much of this presentation is shamelessly based
upon material from the excellent TOK book by
Richard van de Lagemaat thanks go to him!