Logic Chapter2 With Exercise Solutions
Logic Chapter2 With Exercise Solutions
Logic Chapter2 With Exercise Solutions
Premise: The Pistons will beat the Spurs two out of every three times;
and the Spurs will
win one out of every three times.
Premise: The Pistons had won the 5th and 6th games of the series —
two in a row, so if they
had won the final game they would have won three out of three.
Conclusion: The Pistons lost because of the law of averages.
Paraphrasing Exercises #2
Premise: Universities have commonly offered
strange literary theories, and assorted oddities, in
place of the writing courses that ought to have been
offered. Students have been unknowingly
shortchanged.
Conclusion: That is why vast numbers of students
cannot express themselves well in writing.
Paraphrasing Exercises #3
Premise: People divided on ethnic lines tend not to
adopt programs that will give mutual support.
Conclusion: (and premise of the following argument):
Therefore nations that are racially diverse tend to have
lower levels of social support than nations that are
racially homogenous.
Conclusion: Therefore a welfare state is in tension with a
racially diverse population; the more racially diverse a
community is, the more difficult it is to maintain
comprehensive welfare programs.
Paraphrasing Exercises #4
Premise: If freedom were a natural part of the
human condition we could expect to find free
societies spread throughout human history.
Premise: We do not find that, but instead find every
sort of tyrannical government, from time
immemorial.
Conclusion: it is simply false to say (as Orlando
Patterson does) that freedom is a natural part of
the human condition.
Paraphrasing Exercises #5
Premise: if future scientists find a way to signal back
in time, their signals would already have reached
us.
Premise: No such signals have ever reached us.
Conclusion: Future scientists never will find a way to
signal back in time.
Paraphrasing Exercises #5
Premise: if future scientists find a way to signal back
in time, their signals would already have reached
us.
Premise: No such signals have ever reached us.
Conclusion: Future scientists never will find a way to
signal back in time.
Paraphrasing Exercises #6
Premise: Japanese and European whale-hunting
countries have no need to eat whales; they can choose
their diets.
Premise: Eskimos live in an environment so harsh that
their survival obliges them to eat whales; they have no
choice in dietary matters.
Conclusion: Permitting primitive Eskimos to kill some
whales for survival, while at the same time demanding
that modern societies cease to hunt whales, is fair and
reasonable, not hypocritical.
Paraphrasing Exercises #7
Premise: The number of atoms in all of space is so
huge that we can never count them or count the
forces that drive them in all places.
Conclusion: There must be other worlds, in other
places, with different kinds of men and animals.
Paraphrasing Exercises #8
Premise: Where marriages are prearranged, divorce
rates are very low. Often one later comes to love the
person to whom one is married.
Premise: Where marriages are formed on the basis of
romantic love, divorce rates are very high; often one
later comes not to love the person chosen on that basis.
Conclusion: We ought not suppose that romantic love is
a necessary precondition of successful marriage.
Paraphrasing Exercises #9
Premise: Our tax system depends upon the willingness
of persons to pay the taxes they owe.
Premise: That willingness depends, in turn, upon the
widespread belief that almost everyone, including
competitor and neighbors, are also paying the taxes
they owe.
Conclusion: If the Internal Revenue Service (the IRS)
cannot assure us that this fairness is reasonable for us to
suppose, the entire system of voluntary tax payments is
seriously(and perhaps irremediably) threatened.
Paraphrasing Exercises #10
Premise: People and government are obsesses with
racism and talk about it endlessly.
Premise: But we don’t listen and we don’t see, and
therefore we remain in a state of dental, thinking
ourselves absolved of all complicity in racism.
Conclusion: invariably we conclude that it is the
other guy who is in the wrong.
Diagramming Arguments
2 3
1
Diagramming, continued
20
1 2
3
Interwoven Arguments
21
3 4
Interwoven Arguments, continued
22
Compressed argument
Because(1) the greatest mitochondrial variations
occurred in African people, scientists concluded that (2)
they had the longest evolutionary history, indicating (3)
a probable African origin for modern humans.
3
Interwoven Arguments, continued
23
Multiple arguments
(1)It is not necessary – no, nor so much as convenient –
that the legislative should be always in being; but (2)
absolutely necessary that the executive power should,
because (3) there is not always need of new laws to be
made, but (4) always need of execution of the laws
that are made.
3 4
1 2
Diagramming Exercises #1
In a recent attack upon the evils of suburban sprawl,
the authors argue as follows:
The dominant characteristic of sprawl is that each
component of a community—housing, shopping centers,
office parks, and civic institutions—is segregated,
physically separated from the others, causing the
residents of suburbia to spend an inordinate amount of
time and money moving from one place to the next. And
since nearly everyone drives alone, even a sparsely
populated area can generate the traffic of a much
larger traditional town.34
Diagramming Exercises #1
1 We are part of
Europe. 2 It affects us
directly and deeply.
Therefore 3 we should
exercise leadership in
order to change
Europe in the direction
we want.
Diagramming Exercises #7
1 We are part of
Europe. 2 It affects us
directly and deeply.
Therefore 3 we should
exercise leadership in
order to change
Europe in the direction
we want.
Diagramming Exercises #8
1 We are part of
Europe. 2 It affects us
directly and deeply.
Therefore 3 we should
exercise leadership in
order to change
Europe in the direction
we want.
Complex Arguements
Some arguments are exceedingly complex, involving
several arguments interwoven together.
One must understand the author’s intent and capture the
flow of reasoning.
Often, an argument can be analyzed in more than one way
and more than one plausible interpretation may be offered.
Once the structure of the argument is revealed through
careful analysis, one can consider whether the premises
really do support the conclusion.
Complex Argumentative Passages
35
(1) The Big Bang Theory is crumbling… (2) According to orthodox wisdom,
the cosmos began with the Big Bang – an immense, perfectly symmetrical
explosion 20 billion years ago. The problem is that (3) astronomers have
confirmed by observation the existence of huge conglomerations of galaxies
that are simply too big to have been formed in a mere 20 billion years...
Studies based on new data collected by satellite, and backed up by earlier
ground surveys, show that (4) galaxies are clustered into vast ribbons that
stretch billions of light years, and (5) are separated by voids hundreds of
millions of light years across. Because (6) galaxies are observed to travel at
only a small fraction of the speed of light, mathematics shows that (7) such
large clumps of matter must have taken at least one hundred billion years to
come together – five times as long as the time since the hypothetical Big
Bang. (3) Structures as big as those now seen can’t be made in 20 billion
years… (2) The Big Bang theorizes that matter was spread evenly through
the universe. From this perfection, (3) there is no way for such vast clumps to
have formed so quickly.
Complex Argumentative Passages,
36
Diagram
4 5 6
3 2
1
Problems in Reasoning
37
Matrix
Definitions of symbols
Word is being defined or the thing itself is being
defined
The word triangle means a plane figure enclosed by
three straight lines
A triangle is (by definition) a plane figure enclosed by
three straight lines.
Definitions and Their Uses, continued
48
Definiendum
The symbol being defined
Definiens
Thesymbol, or group of symbols, that has the same
meaning as the definiendum
Definitions and Their Uses, continued
49
Stipulative definition
Proposal to arbitrarily assign meaning to a newly
introduced symbol
Neither true nor false
Lexical definition
Reports
a meaning the definiendum already has
May be either true or false
Definitions and Their Uses, continued
51
Precising definitions
Used to eliminate ambiguity or vagueness
Its difiniendum is not a new term
Theoretical definition
Attempts to formulate a theoretically adequate or
scientifically useful description of the objects to which
the term applies
As knowledge about some subject matter increases, one
theoretical definition may be replaced by another
Different theories are accepted at different times
Definitions and Their Uses, continued
53
Persuasive definition
Intended to influence attitudes or stir emotions
Need to be guarded against when distinguishing good
reasoning from bad
Extension, Intension, and the
54
Structure of Definitions
Extension
The collection of objects to which a general term is
correctly applied
Intension
The attributes shared by all objects, and only those
objects, to which a general term applies
Extension and Denotative Definitions
55
Denotative definition
Based on the term’s extension
Often impossible to enumerate all the objects in a
general class
Ostensive definition
Demonstrative definition
Term is defined by pointing at an object
Quasi-ostensive definition
Uses gesture and a descriptive phrase
Intension and the Intensional
56
Definitions
Subjective intension
Setof all attributes the speaker believes to be
possessed by objects denoted by that word
Objective intension
Totalset of characteristics shared by all the objects in
the word’s extension
Conventional intension
Public
meaning that permits and facilitates
communication
Intension and the Intensional
57
Definitions, continued
Synonymous definition
Another word is provided, whose meaning is
understood, as the meaning of the word being defined
Operational definition
Limits
a term’s use to situations where certain actions or
operations lead to specified results
Definition by genus and difference
Identify the larger class of which it is a member and the
distinguishing attributes that characterize it specifically
Rules for Definition by Genus and
58
Difference
A definition should state the essential attributes of
the species
A definition must not be circular
A definition must be neither too broad nor too
narrow
Ambiguous, obscure, or figurative language must not
be used in a definition
A definition should not be negative where it can be
affirmative