Chapter Three
Chapter Three
Course content:-
1. INTRODUCING PHILOSOPHY
I. Meaning and Nature of Philosophy
II. Basic Features of Philosophy
III. Metaphysics and Epistemology
IV. Axiology and Logic
V. Importance of Learning Philosophy
2. BASIC CONCEPTS OF LOGIC
VI. Arguments, Premises and Conclusions
VII. Techniques of Recognizing Arguments
VIII. Types of Arguments: Deduction and Induction
IX. Evaluating Arguments
3. LOGIC AND LANGUAGE
X. Philosophy of Language: An overview
XI. Logic and Meaning
XII. Meaning, Types, and Purposes of Definitions
XIII. Techniques of Definition
XIV. Criteria for Lexical Definitions
understandable language.
Correct reasoning can only be conveyed through language.
The clarification and analysis of terms and statements is the
"English" English?
What is the difference between Spanish and French? Linguists, like Noam Chomsky,
a figure who has come to define the 20th century linguistics, have emphasized the
role of "grammar" and syntax (the rules that govern the structure of sentences) as a
characteristic of any language.
Chomsky believes that humans are born with an innate understanding of what he
calls "universal grammar" (an innate set of linguistic principles shared by all
humans) and a child's exposure to a particular language just triggers this
antecedent knowledge.
Chomsky begins with the study of people's internal language (what he calls "I-
languages"), which are based upon certain rules which generate grammars,
supported in part by the conviction that there is no clear, general and principled
difference between one language and the next, and which may apply across the
field of all languages.
Other attempts, which he dubs "E-languages", have tried to explain a language as
meaning is not something that is associated with a single word or sentence, but can
only be attributed to a whole language (if at all).
linguistic meaning:
conceptual meaning (which refers to the definitions of words
Sentences are made up of words; and words have their own meanings that are to be
conveyed through definitions. Therefore, words are the most basic units in any language,
and thus the most important thing in every argument.
Ordinary language, as most of us are at least vaguely aware, serves various functions in our
Tell stories
Tell lies
Guess at answers
Form hypotheses
Tell jokes
Give directions
Sing songs
Issue commands
For our purpose, two linguistic functions are particularly important: (1) to convey
claim.
A value claim is a claim that something is good, bad, right, wrong,
let us explore some of the ways that cognitive meanings can be defective.
Two problems that affect our cognitive use of language are vagueness and
ambiguity.
A linguistic expression is said to be vague if there are borderline cases in
beer is light in color, light in calories, or light in taste? If one were to describe an
action as proper, does this mean proper in a moral sense or proper in the sense
of being socially acceptable? Or if one were to describe a person as critical, does
this mean that the person is essential for a certain task or that the person tends
to criticize others?
The difference between ambiguity and vagueness is that vague terminology
and vague in another. For example, the word ‗‗slow‘‘ in one context could mean
either mentally retarded or physically slow, but when the word refers to physical
slowness, it could be vague. How slow is slow? Similar remarks apply to ‗‗light,‘‘
‗‗fast,‘‘ and ‗‗rich.‘‘
When does discipline become abuse? The line separating the two is hazy at best, but
unless it is clarified, disputes of this sort will never be resolved.
Example-2:
Mullu: I‟m afraid that Dagim is guilty of cheating in the exam. Last night he confessed to
me that he was sate closer to Tsedale, who is the most excellent student in our class, and
takes almost all answers from her.
Worku: No, you couldn‟t be more mistaken. In this country, no one is guilty until proven
so in a court of law, and Dagim has not yet even been accused of anything.
In this example, the dispute arises over the ambiguity of the word ‗‗guilty.‘‘ Mullu is
cheated in the exam and therefore is guilty of cheating in the exam in the moral sense of
the term. Worku, on the other hand, is using the word in the legal sense. Because Dagim
has not been convicted in a court of law, he is not legally guilty of anything.
Disputes that arise over the meaning of language are called verbal disputes. These are
disputes in which the apparent conflict is not genuine and can be resolved by coming to
agreement about how some words or phrases is to be understood.
Prepared by Hinsene Begna (MBA) 02/19/2022 14
Cont…
Disputes that arise over the meaning of language are called verbal
disputes.
These are disputes in which the apparent conflict is not genuine
Some disputes arise over a disagreement about facts, and these are
life. Aberash hates Fisseha, and she is trying to pin the theft on him
only to shield her criminal boyfriend.
Here, the dispute centers on the factual issues of whether Aberash
told the truth and whether Fisseha stole the computer. Disputes
arisen because of the truth or falsity of claims are factual disputes.
South Ethiopia
Girmaa Gamachuu
Common Names
Animal
Activity
Person
House
Descriptive Phrases
First Prime Minister of Ethiopia
Author of Oromay
Words that are not terms include verbs, non-substantive adjectives, adverbs,
must have some kind of intension or we would not know what persons, if any, they
denote.
Thus, we solve the problem.
One possible solution to this problem is that names are shorthand symbols for
proper names consists of the causal chain of events leading from the point at which the
name is first assigned to the point at which a certain person learns about the name.
The distinction between intension and extension may be further illustrated by
comparing the way in which these concepts can be used to give order to random
sequences of terms.
Terms may be put in the order of increasing intension, increasing extension,
intension.
A series of terms is in the order of increasing extension when each term
in the series (except the first) denotes a class having more members
than the class denoted by the term preceding it.
In other words, the class size gets larger with each successive term.
The order of decreasing extension is the reverse of that of increasing
extension.
Let us see the following examples:
Increasing intension: animal, mammal, feline, tiger
explicated by definitions.
Definition is a technical and structural organization of
This may involve either coining a new word or giving a new meaning to
an old word.
The purpose of a stipulative definition is usually to replace a more
phenomenon or development.
offspring were produced from a male tiger and a female lion and from
names.
Of course, the names ‗‗offspring of male tiger and female lion, the
of a male tiger and a female lion‘‘ tells us nothing new about the
nature of the animal in question.
One stipulative definition may, however, be more or less convenient
even lewd.
A good lexical definition will distinguish these various shadings and
thereby guard against the possibility that two such meanings will be
unconsciously jumbled together into one.
good example: ‗‗‗heat‘ means the energy associated with the random motion of the molecules of
a substance.‘‘
This definition does more than merely assign a meaning to a word; it provides a way of conceiving
between molecular velocity and the phenomena of radiation, gas pressure, molecular elasticity,
and molecular configuration.
In short, this definition of ‗‗heat‘‘ provides the impetus for an entire theory about heat.
―good‖, ―mind‖, and ―God‖ have been given theoretical definitions. In fact most of the major
philosophers in history have given these terms their own peculiar theoretical definitions, and this
fact accounts in part for the unique character of their respective philosophies.
For example, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz‘s definition of ‗‗substance‘‘ in terms of what he called
‗‗monads‘‘ laid the foundation for his metaphysical theory, and John Stuart Mill‘s definition of
‗‗good‘‘ as the greatest happiness of the greatest number provided the underpinnings for his
utilitarian theory of ethics.
or only some of the members of the class denoted by the definiendum are
pointed to.
Here are some examples:
“Chair‟‟ means this and this and this- as you point to a number of chairs, one
enumerated.
story.
As with definitions by enumeration, complete definitions by
The first reason is that the etymological definition of a word often conveys
the word‘s root meaning or seminal meaning from which all other
associated meanings are derived.
Unless one is familiar with this root meaning, one often fails to place
that if one is familiar with the etymology of one word, one often has access to
the meaning of an entire constellation of related words.
For example, if one is familiar with the etymological definition of ‗‗polygon‘‘
(from the Greek words poly, meaning many, and ganos meaning angle), one
might grasp the meanings of ‗‗polygamy‘‘ (from gamos, meaning marriage).
have in biology.
In logic, ‗‗genus‘‘ simply means a relatively larger class, and ‗‗species‘‘ means a
genus mammal and the species feline, or of the genus feline and the species tiger, or
the genus tiger and the species Bengal tiger.
Let us construct a definition by genus and difference for the word ‗‗ice.‘‘ The first
step is to identify a genus of which ice is the species. The required genus is water.
Next we must identify a specific difference (attribute) that makes ice a special form
of water. The required difference is frozen. The completed definition may now be
written out:
Species Difference Genu
―Ice‖ means frozen water
that we often use in our day-to-day life. In this lesson, we will see the common rules of
lexical definitions.
Giving the function of a lexical definition, lexical definitions are what we most frequently
encounter and are what most people mean when they speak of the ‗‗definition‘‘ of a word.
Accordingly, it is appropriate that we have a set of rules that we may use in constructing
our own lexical definitions and in evaluating the lexical definitions of others.
While some of these rules apply to the other kinds of definitions as well, the unique
functions that are served by stipulative, précising, theoretical, and persuasive definitions
prescribe different sets of criteria.
Rule 1: A Lexical Definition Should Conform to the Standards of Proper Grammar.
A definition, like any other form of expression, should be grammatically correct. For
„„Vacation‟‟ means a period during which activity is suspended from work or school.
Technically, the definiendum should be put in quotation marks or italics, but this
negative:
“Concord‟‟ means harmony.
or Ambiguous Language.
A definition is figurative if it involves metaphors or tends to paint a