Intro Logic Student Sample
Intro Logic Student Sample
ST U D EN T
INTRODUCTORY LOGIC
The Fundamentals of Thinking Well
ST U D EN T: F I F T H ED I T I O N
canonpress
Moscow, Idaho
ogic is the science and art of reasoning well. We reason as we draw conclusions from other
information by means of logical arguments. Arguments are made up of premises and
conclusions, which are types of statements. Statements are sentences that are true or false.
Categorical statements predicate something of a subject, and thus connect subject and predicate terms. A term is the verbal expression of a concept. Consequently, in order to follow logical arguments as we reason, we must know how to determine the truth of statements, and to
understand statements, we need to be able to define the terms that make up those statements.
In this text we begin with terms. Your students will learn how to define terms and how
to relate terms to other terms in genus and species charts. They will then study statements,
discovering ways to determine the truth of a given statement, and will examine how statements relate to each other. Next, they will learn how to put statements together into arguments, and gather strategies for distinguishing valid arguments from invalid ones. They will
do this first in the tightly controlled, artificial environment of categorical syllogisms. You
will then lead them into the real world as they take the tools they have mastered and learn
how to apply them to arguments in normal English. Once they have gained the skills of
analyzing the arguments of others, they will take a brief foray into constructing arguments
to establish conclusions of their own. They will then finish this course by learning to detect
the fallacies that litter arguments in daily life.
This logic course thus follows the program outlined by Dorothy Sayers in The Lost Tools
of Learning. In that seminal essay, she outlined for us the course of study for the medieval
logic student, who learned how to use language: how to define his terms and make accurate
statements; how to construct an argument and how to detect fallacies in argument. Terms,
statements, arguments, fallaciesthese are concepts that will become familiar to your students in this study of Introductory Logic: The Fundamentals of Thinking Well.
James B. Nance
April 2014
I N T R O D U CT I O N
od created man with the ability to reason: Come now, and let us
reason together, saith the Lord (Is. 1:18). He did this so that we
could communicate with Him and with one another. This enables us
to love and obey Him. Reasoning means drawing proper conclusions
from other information. A proper use of reason allows us to form rational statements, and to understand the statements that are made by others. It allows us, for example, to take universal statements such as God
has commanded all men everywhere to repent and to apply them, first
to ourselves and then to our neighbor: We are men, therefore we must
repent. Without the ability to reason, we would be unable to discuss,
preach, read, hear the gospel, or follow Gods commands. In other
words, proper reasoning opens the mind so that it can close upon truth.
Some have assumed that this ability to reason is what constitutes man being created in the image of God. But there are several
problems with this assumption. First, there are other creatures (like
angels and cherubim) who have an ability to reason, but who do
not bear the image of God the same way that man does. Another
problem is that it implies that humans who are very young (e.g., a
fertilized human ovum) or who are severely retarded cannot bear
Gods image, or that they do so imperfectly. Rather than treating
reason as the image of God in man, it would be far better to treat
reason as a gift that God gives (out of His own nature and character) to all intelligent creatures. The more He gives, the greater our
responsibility to love Him, as Scripture says, with all our minds.
Formal logic is the science and art of reasoning well. As a science,
logic includes discovering and identifying the patterns or rules by
which we reason. As an art, logic teaches how to follow those rules,
without abusing them in a wooden (and unreasonable) way. About
sixteen centuries ago, Augustine said this about the science of logic:
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KEY POINT
DEFINITION
INTRODUCTORY LOGIC
And yet the validity of logical sequences is not a thing
devised by men, but is observed and noted by them
that they may be able to learn and teach it; for it exists eternally in the reason of things, and has its origin
with God. For as the man who narrates the order of
events does not himself create that order; and as he
who describes the situations of places, or the natures
of animals, or roots, or minerals, does not describe arrangements of man; and as he who points out the stars
and their movements does not point out anything that
he himself or any other man has ordained; in the same
way, he who says, When the consequent is false, the
antecedent must also be false, says what is most true;
but he does not himself make it so, he only points out
that it is so. (On Christian Doctrine, book II, chapter 32)
KEY POINT
DEFINITION
INTRODUCTORY LOGIC
DEFINITION
DEFINITION
KEY POINT
The subject of logic may be divided into two main branches: formal
and informal. Formal logic deals directly with reasoning, by considering the means of distinguishing between proper and improper modes
of reasoning. Informal logic deals with operations of thinking that are
indirectly related to reasoning, such as defining terms, relating terms
to each other, and determining relationships between statements.
Because informal fallacies are not formal methods of reasoning, they
are also included under the branch of informal logic.
Formal logic itself may be divided into two main branches, induction and deduction. Induction deals with arguments of likelihood
and probability. By induction we draw conclusions from facts or experience, conclusions which go beyond those facts. Inductive conclusions
are never certain, but only probable. As such, they can be considered
strong or weak, depending on how well experience supports the conclusion. They may also be strengthened by further experience. You can
see that induction is the logic of the experimental sciences.
Whereas induction deals with arguments that are strong or weak,
deduction deals with arguments that are valid or invalid. If valid, the
conclusion follows from the premises, and it does so with certainty.
A valid conclusion is one that is contained within the premises: if
the premises of a valid argument are true, then the conclusion must
be true. There are many branches of deductive reasoning. Two main
branches are categorical logic and propositional logic. To the best
of our knowledge, categorical logic was first developed as a science by
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DEFINITIONS
DEFINITIONS
INTRODUCTORY LOGIC
the Greek philosopher Aristotle (384322 B.C.). Categorical logic
deals with the syllogism, which is a type of deductive argument in
which the conclusion connects one category (or term) with another,
hence the name categorical logic. Propositional logic connects entire
propositions together in arguments.
These branches of logic can be arranged as seen in the chart below:
logic
informal logic
terms statements informal
fallacies
formal logic
deduction
categorical
logic
induction
propositional
logic
U N IT 1
TERMS
AND DEFINITIONS
Content s
Lesson 1: The Purposes and Types of Definitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Exercise 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Lesson 2: Genus and Species . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Exercise 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
Lesson 3: Extension and Intension . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Exercise 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Lesson 4: Methods of Defining . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
Exercise 4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
Lesson 5: Rules for Defining by Genus and Dierence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
Exercise 5 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
Unit 1 Review Questions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
Unit 1 Review Exercises . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
L ES SO N 1
DEFINITIONS
KEY POINT
CAUTION
It is extremely important
to define your terms at the
beginning of any debate.
You want to argue about
substance, not words.
INTRODUCTORY LOGIC
DEFINITIONS
CAUTION
A precising definition is
very dependent on the situation in which it is used.
KEY POINT
KEY POINT
SUMMARY
Definitions give meanings for terms. Definitions can show relationships between terms, remove ambiguity, reduce vagueness, increase
vocabulary, explain concepts theoretically, and influence attitudes.
Along with these purposes are the five types of definitions: lexical,
precising, stipulative, theoretical, and persuasive.
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2. The word grace is an ambiguous word. Write two lexical definitions for the word grace,
giving two of its dierent meanings. (2)
3. Write a precising definition of the word soon to clarify the vagueness in the sentence
I will be home soon. (2)
5. Write a persuasive definition of the word television from the point of view of a mother
who thinks her children watch too much of it. (4)
6. Write a short, imaginary dialogue between two people having a verbal dispute about
the word believe. Then introduce a third person who settles the dispute by presenting
lexical definitions for the word that eliminate the ambiguity. (Continue on the back
if needed.) (4)
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L ES SO N 2
GENUS
AND SPECIES
dairy
fruits
vegetables
grains
Here we see the genus food, and under it some of the species of the
term food: meats, dairy products, fruits, vegetables, and grains. Of
these, the terms dairy products and grains are shown to be genera (the
plural of genus) for the species under them. The genus dairy products is
broader than any of its species, such as butter, because dairy products
includes not only butter but cheese, cream, milk, and any other species that could be placed under it. The chart also shows that the term
grains is the genus of wheat, barley, and rye. Of course, many other
terms could be included as species of grains. Can you think of any?
The words genus and species are relative terms. Each term can be
both a genus and a speciesa genus of the terms below it, and a
species of the term above it. Thus grains is both a species of food and
a genus of wheat. This process can continue (although not indefinitely) both downward and upward. Cheese could be the genus for
dierent varieties of cheese, such as Swiss, Parmesan, and Cheddar.
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DEFINITIONS
KEY POINT
INTRODUCTORY LOGIC
CAUTION
Formal logic
Induction
KEY POINT
Deduction
Logic as art
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Lawyers
This is an error because the species overlap: some women are lawyers. The error was caused by using two dierent dividing principles
for the term people: division by gender and division by profession.
A similar error would occur when a term appears at the wrong
level in the chart, such as in this example:
Logic
Formal logic
Induction
THINKING DEEPER
Ball
Baseball
Mid-winter ball
Finally, remember that a species is not a part of the genus, but rather
a type or kind of that genus. The species of the genus bicycle may
include mountain bike, but not handlebars. So when asked to make a
genus and species chart, do not make a whole to parts chart like this:
Bicycle
Frame
Pedals
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CAUTION
INTRODUCTORY LOGIC
SUMMARY
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animals
mammals
3.
fish
2.
air-breathers
glasses
sunglasses
hand
fingers
4.
wine glasses
thumb
palm
airplane
jet
Fill in the genus and species hierarchy for each term given, identifying a) a genus for the
term, b) another species under that genus, and c) a species of the term. (3 each)
5.
(a)
6.
angel
(c)
(b)
(a)
chair
(b)
(c)
7. Draw a genus and species hierarchy that includes the following terms: ALGEBRA, BIOLOGY, CHEMISTRY, GEOMETRY, MATH, PHYSICS, SCIENCE, SUBJECT (6)
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L ES SO N 3
EXTENSION
AND INTENSION
INCREASING
EXTENSION
device
|
timepiece
|
clock
|
digital clock
KEY POINT
INCREASING
INTENSION
The term clock has a greater extension than the term digital clock
that is, there are more clocks than there are digital clocks, because
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DEFINITIONS
INTRODUCTORY LOGIC
THINKING DEEPER
clock not only includes all digital clocks, but all other types of clocks
as well. Similarly, there are more timepieces than there are clocks
(can you name some?), so the extension of timepiece is greater than
the extension of clock. As you go up a hierarchy, extension increases.
However, intension decreases as you go up the chart, and increases
as you go down. Timepieces have more attributes in common (i.e., a
greater intension) than devices, clocks have more attributes in common than timepieces, and so on.
Increasing extension is parallel to increasing abstraction. The more
abstract a term is, the greater its extent. Device is more abstract than
timepiece. To think is more abstract than to reason, and thus would
be higher on the genus and species chart, having a greater extension
(though applying extension and intension to verbs tends to be more
dicult than applying them to nouns).
Similarly, an increase in intension is accompanied by an increase
in concreteness. The more attributes a term has, the more concrete it
is. Digital clock is more concrete than clock, which is more concrete
than timepiece.
The ability to list terms in order of increasing (or decreasing) extension (or intension) is a great help in understanding the relationships among them. Here we have in alphabetical order a number of
terms from a genus and species hierarchy:
ANIMAL, APE, GORILLA, LIVING BEING, MAMMAL
KEY POINTS
Arranged in order of increasing extension (and decreasing intension), this list would look like this:
GORILLA, APE, MAMMAL, ANIMAL, LIVING BEING
Rearranged in order of increasing intension (that is, decreasing
extension), the list would simply be placed in reverse order:
LIVING BEING, ANIMAL, MAMMAL, APE, GORILLA
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5. Determine the attribute or characteristic that distinguishes the term from the genus
given in parentheses after the term. (3)
TIMEPIECE (DEVICE)
CLOCK (TIMEPIECE)
DIGITAL CLOCK (CLOCK)
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U N I T 1 R E VI E W
REVIEW QUESTIONS
Answers can be found in the lesson under which the questions are listed.
Introduction
1. What is reasoning?
2. Why has God given men the ability to reason?
3. What is formal logic? In what way is logic an attribute of God?
4. What is the Law of Excluded Middle?
5. What is the Law of Identity?
6. What is the Law of Non-contradiction?
7. How does formal logic dier from informal logic?
8. What are some of the topics dealt with under informal logic?
9. What are the two branches of formal logic?
10. What are some dierences between induction and deduction?
11. What are two branches of deduction?
12. Who first developed categorical logic, and when did he live?
13. What is one dierence between categorical logic and propositional logic?
14. What are the branches of logic dealt with in this book?
1. What is a term?
2. What is the connection between a term and a word?
3. What does it mean to define a term?
4. What are six purposes for defining terms?
5. What are the five types of definitions?
6. Which types would you likely find in a dictionary?
7. What is an ambiguous word?
8. What is a vague word?
9. What is a lexical definition?
10. What is a precising definition?
11. What is a stipulative definition?
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INTRODUCTORY LOGIC
12. What is a theoretical definition?
13. What is a persuasive definition?
1.
2.
3.
4.
What is a genus?
What is a species?
Can a term be both the genus of one term and the species of another?
What are some of the common errors made in constructing genus and species charts?
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
1.
2.
3.
4.
What are the six rules for defining by genus and dierence?
Can you restate these rules in your own words?
What is the dierence between an essential and an accidental attribute?
What are three ways that a definition can be unclear?
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