Philo 1 Basic Logic
Philo 1 Basic Logic
Logical Structure
To inspect the structure of the argument, formal logicians must represent the argument in order
to reveal its logical structure. The representation of logical structure below is in vertical mode.
To wit:
i. If P then Q
ii. P
iii. Therefore Q
Since the logical structure has been revealed, one may now inspect the form of the argument by
presenting its truth table. Notice that the content of the premises and conclusion is unimportant in
the determination of validity. And when an argument is valid, this means that in all substitution
instances of its truth value, you will not have a case where the premise set is true (or 1, since
some logicians substitute 1 for True, to avoid the usual empirical meaning attached to the terms
true or false) and the conclusion false (i. e. 0, accordingly). If you do, the argument form is
invalid.
*Note that conditional statements can be mistaken to biconditional statements (if and
only if.) and statements which have only if clauses.
d. An if and only if statement is represented by P Q. It is called a biconditional.
Truth Table:
P Q P Q
T T T
T F F
F T F
F F T
If and Only If
In symbolizing truth-functional claims, nothing can take the place of a careful reading
of what the claim in question says. It always comes down to a matter of exercising
careful judgment.
If Parker beats Moore at 9-ball (P), then Moore had (or must have had) a bad day
(B).
Using the letters indicated in the parentheses, wed symbolize this as
P B
If the grammatical tenses seem to not make sense, we need to adjust those in
whatever way necessary. We can use if in front of a conditionals antecedent, or we
can use only if in front of its consequent; we produce exactly equivalent claims in
two cases. As in the case with if, it doesnt matter where the only if part of the
claim occurs. The part of this claim thats about Moore is the consequent, eventhough
it occurs at the beginning of this version:
Only if Moore has a bad day will Parker beat him at 9-ball.
*The symbol ~ (negation sign) negation, used to represent the word not.
(Closest English Counterpart: it is not the case that)
Truth Table:
P ~P_
T F
F T
Every statement either contains a connecting word or it does not. Statements without any
connecting word however long are simple statement from the point of view of formal logicians.
Simple statements can be represented by using a single capital letter following the rules
mentioned above. For example, consider the statement Bachelors are unmarried males. It can be
represented by the letter, B.
Now consider the reverse, if the affirmative P is false, then it is the negative ~P that is true.
When you see the negation sign before a statement it does not necessarily mean the statement is
false. A negated statement can be true or it can be false. In short, P v ~P is always true because in
all possible substitution of its truth-values the statement is true. This means P v ~P is a tautology.
Truth Table for the statement: P v ~P
T ~(T) or F
F ~(F) or T
The above statement is a tautology, since the statement is either true or false and not contrasting
one and the same value (at a given time and in a given respect).
References:
Acuna, Andresito E. Philosophical Analysis: Advanced Techniques For Critical Thinking.
Philosophy Department, University of the Philippines, Diliman. 7 th Ed. 2006.
Moore, Brooke Noel and Parker, Richard. Critical Thinking. Mayfield Publishing Company,
Mountain View, California. 2002.