Title: Unit 1D
1Unit 1D
2TWO TYPES OF ARGUMENTS
Arguments come in two basic types
3INDUCTIVE ARGUMENT
An inductive argument makes a case for a general
conclusion from more specific premises. In other
words, a conclusion is formed by generalizing
from a set of more specific premises.
4EXAMPLE
Premise Sparrows are birds that
fly. Premise Eagles are birds that
fly. Premise Hawks are birds that
fly. Premise Larks are birds that
fly. Conclusion All birds fly.
5NOTES ON INDUCTIVE ARGUMENTS
- An inductive argument cannot proveits conclusion
true. - An inductive argument can be evaluated only in
terms of its strength. - The strength of an inductive argument is a
measure of how well the premises support the
conclusion. Clearly, this is subjective (a
personal judgment).
6DEDUCTIVE ARGUMENT
A deductive argument makes a case for a specific
conclusion from more general premises. In other
words, a conclusion is deduced from a set of
general premises.
7EXAMPLE
Premise All college professors have masters
degrees. Premise Ms. Gomez is a college
professor. Conclusion Ms. Gomez has a masters
degree.
8NOTES ON DEDUCTIVE ARGUMENTS
- A deductive argument can be evaluated in terms of
its validity and soundness. - A deductive argument is valid if its conclusion
follows necessarily from its premises. Validity
is concerned only with the logical structure of
the argument. It has nothing to do with the truth
of the premises or the conclusion. - A deductive argument is sound if it is valid and
its premises are all true. - A sound deductive argument provides definitive
proof that its conclusion is true. (However, this
often involves personal judgment.)
9A VENN DIAGRAM TEST OF VALIDITY
To test the validity of an argument with a Venn
diagram
- Draw a Venn diagram that represents all the
information contained in the premises. - Check to see whether the Venn diagram also
contains the conclusion. If it does, then the
argument is valid. Otherwise, the argument is
not valid.
10CONDITIONAL DEDUCTIVE ARGUMENTS
A conditional deductive argument has a
conditional statement for its first premise.
There are four basic conditional arguments
1. Affirming the hypothesis (antecedent).
2. Affirming the conclusion (consequent).
3. Denying the hypothesis (antecedent). 4.
Denying the conclusion (consequent).
11AFFIRMING THE HYPOTHESIS
Structure If p, then q. p is true q is
true Validity Valid This argument is also
known as modus ponems.
12EXAMPLE
Premise If one gets a college degree, then one
can get a good job. Premise Marilyn has a
college degree. Conclusion Marilyn can get a
good job.
VALID
13AFFIRMING THE CONCLUSION
Structure If p, then q. q is true p is
true Validity Invalid
14EXAMPLE
Premise If one gets a college degree, then one
can get a good job. Premise Marilyn gets a good
job. Conclusion Marilyn has a college degree.
INVALID
15DENYING THE HYPOTHESIS
Structure If p, then q. p is not true q
is not true Validity Invalid
16EXAMPLE
Premise If one gets a college degree, then one
can get a good job. Premise Marilyn does not
have a college degree. Conclusion Marilyn
cannot get a good job.
INVALID
17DENYING THE CONCLUSION
Structure If p, then q. q is not true p
is not true Validity Valid This argument is
also known as modus tollens.
18EXAMPLE
Premise If one gets a college degree, then one
can get a good job. Premise Marilyn does not
have a good job. Conclusion Marilyn does not
have a college degree.
VALID
19DEDUCTIVE ARGUMENTS WITH A CHAIN OF CONDITIONALS
1. Structure If p, then q. If q, then r. If
p, then r. Validity Valid
2. Structure If p, then q. If r, then
q. If p, then r. Validity Invalid