LOGIC Lecture 8
LOGIC Lecture 8
LOGIC Lecture 8
MRS.Irum Fakhar
Standard Forms Categorical Syllogisms
Miner premise: The premise containing in the minor term is called the minor premise.
Example of all:
Middle T
Major premise:
Major T
Major T
No heroes are cowards
Miner premise:
Miner T
Some Soldiers are not cowards
Conclusion: Some Soldiers are heroes.
Miner T Major T
Mood
Mood: ()
The mood of a standard form syllogism is determined
by the types (identified by letter (A, E, I, and O) of the
standard form categorical proposition it contains. The
mood of every syllogism is represented by three letters,
in a specific order.
The first letter names the type of the syllogisms major
premise.
The second letter names the type of its minor premise.
And the third letter names the type of its conclusion.
For example, the categorical syllogism: EIO
E: No geese are felines. ()
I: Some birds are geese.
O: Therefore, some birds are not felines.
Clearly, "Some birds are not felines" is the conclusion of
this syllogism. The major term of the syllogism is "felines"
(the predicate term of its conclusion), so "No geese are
felines" (the premise in which "felines" appears) is its
major premise. Similarly, the minor term of the syllogism is
"birds and Some birds are geese" is its minor premise.
"Geese" is the middle term of the syllogism.
Total 64 kinds of Mood are shown in the below table.
EAA IAA O
AAA EAE IAE O
AAE EAI IAI O
AAI EAO IAO O
AAO
Zahid is a man.
1 4 12 16
2 4 12 16
3 6 10 16
4 8 8 16
Total 22 42 64
Venn Diagram Techniques for Testing
Syllogisms
Venn diagram: The iconic representation of
categorical prepositions and of arguments, to
display their logical forms using overlapping.
S: Swedes P: Peasants
M: Musicians
Some Detail about Venn diagram:
Two-circle Venn Diagrams represent the relationship
between the classes designated by the subject and predicate
terms in standard-form categorical propositions. If we add a
third circle, we can represent the relationship among the
classes designated by the three terms of a categorical syllogism.
We use the label S to designate the circle for the minor term
(the subject of the conclusion), the label P to designate the
circle for the major term (the predicate of the conclusion), and
the label M to designate the circle for the middle term. The
result is a diagram of eight classes that represent the possible
combinations of S, P, and M.
With this diagram we can represent the propositions in
a categorical syllogism of any form to determine
whether or not that form yields a valid deductive
argument.
To do this, we diagram the premises and then examine
the result to see if it includes a diagram of the
conclusion. If it does, we know that the premises entail
the conclusionthat together they say what is said by
the conclusionand that the form is valid. If not, we
know that the conclusion is not implied by the
premises, and the form is invalid.
Syllogistic Rules and Syllogistic Fallacies
Since the validity of a categorical syllogism depends solely
upon its logical form, it is relatively simple to state the
conditions under which the premises of syllogisms succeed
in guaranteeing the truth of their conclusions.
Here is
provided a list of six rules, each of which states a necessary
condition for the validity of any categorical syllogism.
Violating any of these rules involves committing one of the
formal fallacies, errors in reasoning that result from reliance
on an invalid logical form. Here is concentrated on the
rules required for a standard-form of categorical syllogism
and the fallacies created for violating these rules
Rule: 1:
A valid
categorical syllogism will have three and only three
unambiguous categorical terms. Or avoid four
terms.
The use of exactly three categorical terms is part of the
definition of a categorical syllogism, and we saw earlier that
the use of an ambiguous term in more than one of its senses
amounts to the use of two distinct terms. In categorical
syllogisms, using more than three terms commits the fallacy
of four terms. The syllogism appears to have only three terms,
but because one term plays two roles, it actually has four
Fallacy: Four terms OR the fallacy of equivocation
Example: 1
Power tends to corrupt
Knowledge is power
Knowledge tends to corrupt
Explanation:
There are really four since one of
them; the middle term power is used in different senses in the
two premises. To reveal the arguments invalidity we need only
note that the word power in the first premise means the
possession of control or command over people, whereas
the word power in the second premise means the ability to
control things.
Example: 2
All rare things are expensive things.
All great novels are rare
things.
Therefore, all great novels are expensive things.
Explanation:
This syllogism seems to be
a valid AAA-1, Barbara, but because the middle term is used in
the major premise in one meaning and then the meaning of
the middle term is shifted in the minor premise, you actually
have FOUR terms and not THREE as required by the very
definition of any standard form categorical syllogism
Rule: 2:
And:
All tigers are mammals
All mammals are animals
All animals are tigers
When a term is distributed in the conclusion, lets
say that P is distributed, then that term is saying
something about every member of the P class. If
that same term is NOT distributed in the major
premise, then the major premise is saying
something about only some members of the P class.
Remember that the minor premise says nothing
about the P class. Therefore, the conclusion
contains information that is not contained in the
premises, making the argument invalid.
Rule: 4:
A
valid categorical syllogism may not have two negative premises.
OR
Note: 1:
We can reduce the
number of terms to three simply by Obverting the conclusion.
AEE-II
All mammals are warm-blooded animals.
No lizards are warm-blooded
animals.
Therefore, no lizards are mammals.
Note: 2:
We can reduce the
number of terms to three simply by Contraposition of
the first and Obverting the second, leaving the
conclusion unchanged.
First Premise: No non-residents are citizens.
Conversion: No
citizens are non-residents.
Obversion: All citizens are residents.
Second Premise: All non-citizens are non-voters.
Then: AAA-I
All citizens are residents.
All voters are citizens.
Therefore, all
voters are residents.