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Truth, Validity, and Soundness

The document introduces the concepts of truth, validity, and soundness which are important for analyzing and evaluating arguments. It then provides 20 statements for the reader to determine whether each one is true or false based on the definitions of these key terms.

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Crese Banaag
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
637 views2 pages

Truth, Validity, and Soundness

The document introduces the concepts of truth, validity, and soundness which are important for analyzing and evaluating arguments. It then provides 20 statements for the reader to determine whether each one is true or false based on the definitions of these key terms.

Uploaded by

Crese Banaag
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Truth, Validity, and Soundness

Keith Burgess-Jackson
1 September 2006

The concepts of truth, validity, and soundness are important in this


course, since one of our concerns is the analysis and evaluation of
arguments. The following exercises are designed to test your under-
standing of these concepts. To solve the exercises, you must not only
have memorized the definitions of the terms, but understood the
ideas they express. In each case, in addition to marking a “T” or an
“F” on the line, determine whether the statement is true or false by
definition or by inference from one or more definitions. For example,
it is true by definition that a puppy is a dog (since “puppy” means
young dog), but true by inference that a puppy is not a cat (since no
dogs are cats).

____ 1. All sound arguments are valid arguments.

____ 2. All valid arguments are sound arguments.

____ 3. All valid arguments have true conclusions.

____ 4. All sound arguments have true conclusions.

____ 5. All invalid arguments have false conclusions.

____ 6. All unsound arguments have false conclusions.

____ 7. All sound arguments have true premises.

____ 8. All valid arguments have true premises.

____ 9. If a valid argument has a false conclusion, then it has at least


one false premise.

____ 10. If a valid argument has a true conclusion, then it has true
premises.

____ 11. If the premises of a valid argument are true, then the con-
clusion is true.

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____ 12. There can be a valid argument with a false conclusion.

____ 13. There can be an invalid argument with a true conclusion.

____ 14. There can be a valid argument with false premises.

____ 15. There can be an invalid argument with true premises.

____ 16. There can be a sound argument with a false conclusion.

____ 17. There can be an unsound argument with a true conclusion.

____ 18. There can be a sound argument with false premises.

____ 19. There can be an unsound argument with true premises.

____ 20. There can be an invalid but sound argument.

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