Title: Deduction and Induction
1Deduction and Induction
Elementary deduction, my dear Watson
2Induction the type of argument in which the
conclusion is supposed to follow from the
premise(s) with probability.
John is a Republican, so he probably voted for
Bush.
3Deduction the type of argument in which the
premises are meant to be providing such solid
support that the conclusion should be
inescapable.
4Deduction the type of argument in which the
conclusion is supposed to follow from the
premise(s) with necessity.
All men are mortal Socrates is a man So Socrates
is mortal.
5Two kinds of Goodness for Deductive arguments
Spiders are reptiles, and All reptiles are
democrats, so Spiders are democrats.
6Deduction
Valid or Invalid
Sound or Unsound
7 Valid An argument is valid when it
is impossible for the premises to all be true and
the conclusion be false.
Jones is a citizen because she can vote, and
only citizens can vote.
8If the premises can all be true and the
conclusion false, it is invalid.
If Ronald Reagan was assassinated, then hes
dead. So he must have been assassinated, since
hes dead.
9- SOUND An argument is sound if it
- is valid, and
- b) has all true premises
If Lincoln was assassinated, hes dead. And he
was, so he is.
What is the truth-value of the conclusion of a
sound argument?
10UNSOUND An argument is unsound if it is
invalid Or not all its premises are true or
both of the above
11Spiders are reptiles, and All reptiles are
democrats, so Spiders are democrats.
Valid, but unsound
12Two kinds of Goodness for Inductive arguments
Every Secretary of Defense so far has been a
woman, so the next one will probably be a woman
too.
13Induction
Strong or Weak
Cogent or Uncogent
14Strong An argument is strong if it is more
likely that the conclusion would be true, given
the premises, than that it would not be.
The next President is probably going to be man,
since all Presidents so far have been.
15Weak an argument is weak if it is not strong,
I.e., if it is not more likely that
the conclusion would be true given the
premises, than that it would not be.
Turner is an orthodontist, so hes probably
homeless.
16- COGENT An argument is cogent if
- It is strong, and
- All its premises are true
Today is Labor Day, so probably all kids will
head back to school tomorrow, since Labor Day is
usually the end of summer break.
17UNCOGENT an argument is uncogent if it is
weak Or not all its premises are true. Or both
of the above.
18Five Typical Kinds of Deductive Argument
Argument from Mathematics
Argument from Definition
Categorical Syllogism
Hypothetical Syllogism
Disjunctive Syllogism
19Argument from mathematics involves
computation Joe must own at least ten dvds
hes been buying one a week since he got that
dvd player in June.
20Argument from definition word
meaning Charley is an ignoramus, so he doesnt
know anything
21Categorical syllogism two premises plus
conclusion concerns categories (names of
classes) includes quantifying words all
no some All cats are mammals, and no
mammals are fish, so no cats are fish.
22Disjunctive syllogism eitheror Either
well get Chinese or Thai. But Bangkok Café is
closed today, so well have to get Chinese.
23Hypothetical syllogism ifthen If
Washington was assassinated, hes dead. But he
wasnt, so hes not.
24Six Typical Kinds of Inductive Argument
Prediction
Argument from Authority
Argument by Analogy
Inductive Generalization
Causal Inference
Argument from Signs
25Prediction reasoning that something will
happen in the future The Orioles will probably
come in last place this year because they stink.
26Causal inference from effect to cause or from
cause to effect (turns on knowledge of cause and
effect) Smith should stop smoking cigarettes,
especially since theres a history of heart
disease in her family.
27Argument from authority conclusion is based on
someones word Senator Leahy should probably
go f himself since Vice-President Cheney said
he should.
28Argument from signs conclusion is based on a
sign This must be his office it says 238
right there on the door.
29Argument from analogy turns on a similarity
between things The world is like a huge
machine made up of smaller machines, and since
machines have intelligent creators, the world
must have one too.
30Inductive generalization moves from fewer to
more Philosophers always write both fiction and
non-fiction. After all, Sartre and Rousseau both
did.
31Deduction
Valid/ invalid
Sound/ unsound
Argument from mathematics
Argument from definition
Categorical Syllogism
Hypothetical Syllogism
Disjunctive Syllogism
32Induction
Strong/ bad
Cogent/ uncogent
Strong/ weak
Prediction
Causal inference
Argument by Analogy
Inductive Generalization
Appeal to Authority
Argument from Signs