Module 1 Logic
Module 1 Logic
MODULE 1
Atty. Juniven Rey S. Umadhay
WHAT IS LOGIC?
Logic may be defined as the science of reasoning. However, this is not to suggest
that logic is an empirical (i.e., experimental or observational) science like physics,
biology, or psychology. Rather, logic is a non-empirical science like mathematics.
Also, in saying that logic is the science of reasoning, we do not mean that it is
concerned with the actual mental (or physical) process employed by a thinking
entity when it is reasoning. The investigation of the actual reasoning process falls
more appropriately within the province of psychology, neurophysiology, or
cybernetics.
Even if these empirical disciplines were considerably more advanced than they
presently are, the most they could disclose is the exact process that goes on in a
being's head when he or she (or it) is reasoning. They could not, however, tell us
whether the being is reasoning correctly or incorrectly.
Distinguishing correct reasoning from incorrect reasoning is the task of logic.
Examples of Inferences:
(1) You see smoke and infer that there is a fire.
(2) You count 19 persons in a group that originally had 20, and you infer that
someone is missing.
Note carefully the difference between ‘infer’ and ‘imply’, which are sometimes
confused. We infer the fire on the basis of the smoke, but we do not imply the fire.
On the other hand, the smoke implies the fire, but it does not infer the fire. The
word ‘infer’ is not equivalent to the word ‘imply’, nor is it equivalent to
‘insinuate’.
Now let us get back to inferences and arguments. Earlier, we discussed two
examples of inferences. Let us see how these can be represented as arguments. In
the case of the smoke-fire inference, the corresponding argument is given as
follows.
Deductive Validity
Our goal in Logic is to separate out the good arguments from the bad. Here’s one
very good property
that an argument can have: it can be deductively valid. An argument is deductively
valid if and only
if the truth of its premises is sufficient for the truth of its conclusion.
“An argument is deductively valid if and only if the truth of its premises is
sufficient for the truth of its conclusion.”
Equivalently, an argument is deductively valid if and only if there is no way for its
premises to all be truewhile its conclusion is simultaneously false.
“An argument is deductively valid if and only if it is impossible for its premises
to all be true while its conclusion is simultaneously false.”
Just because an argument is deductively valid, it doesn’t follow that the conclusion
of the argument is true.
The third argument above is deductively valid, but its conclusion is false. Obama is
not younger than
40. If, however, a deductively valid argument has all true premises, then its
conclusion must be true as
well. If a deductively valid argument has all true premises, then we say that the
argument is deductively
sound.
If an argument is deductively sound, then its conclusion will be true. Of all the
good making features
of arguments that we will discuss today, none is finer than deductive soundness. Of
all the honorifics
of arguments that we’ll discuss today, there is no finer compliment to an argument
than to say that it’s
deductively sound.
Opening Move
At the beginning of a dialectic, you may:
1. State your position; or
2. State and provide an argument for your position.
Responding to a Position
In response to your interlocutor’s statement of a position, you may:
1. Accept their position;
2. Reject their position; or
3. Offer an argument against their position.
Responding to an Argument
In response to your interlocutor providing a deductive argument for their
position,you may:
1. Accept their conclusion;
2. Reject one of their argument’s premises;
3. Provide an argument against one of their premises; or
4. Claim that their argument is invalid, and provide a (formal) counterexampleto
the validity of their argument.
Informal Fallacies
A fallacy is an error in reasoning. Simply because an argument contains false
premises, this is not enough to make the argument fallacious. It must make a
mistake in inferring the conclusion from the premises.
When an argument commits a fallacy, something has gone wrong with the
inference from the premises to
the conclusion.
A formal fallacy is a fallacy that we may diagnose as bad simply by looking at the
argument’s form. For instance, the following is a formal fallacy:
1. If Russia invades Ukraine, then Russia wants war.
2. Russia wants war.
3. So, Russia will invade Ukraine.
An informal fallacy is a fallacy which we cannot diagnose by simply inspecting the
argument’s form; in order to diagnose the fallacy, we must look additionally to the
argument’s content.
1. Fallacies of Irrelevance
Example: After Sandra Fluke argued before Congress that healthcare should
include birth control, since it is used to combat ovarian cysts, Rush Limbaugh
responded with: “What does it say about the college co-ed Sandra Fluke, who goes
before a congressional committee and essentially says that she must be paid to
have sex, what does that make her? It makes her a slut, right? It makes her a
prostitute.”
Example: Robert Kennedy argues that we shouldn’t have a wind farm in the
Nantucket
Sound because the wind turbines would kill thousands of migrating songbirds and
sea ducks each year. However, Robert Kennedy is only opposed to the wind farm
because he and his family have property in Hyannis Port whose value would be
hurt by the building of the wind farms. So songbirds and sea ducks are just a
distraction; we should build the wind farm.
Example: Newt Gingrich called for Bill Clinton to be impeached for lying about
his affair with Monica Lewinsky. However, at the same time, Gingrich was lying
about his own affair.
So, Clinton ought not to have been impeached.
Why this is fallacious: the argument swings free of the person who happens to be
making it. Even if the person who happens to be advancing the argument has some
personal flaw, or stands in principle, somebody else without those flaws could
make the very same argument.
Straw Man
A straw man fallacy occurs when one misrepresents somebody else’s position or
argument (usually making it more simplistic or naive than their actual position or
argument), and then argues against the misrepresented position or argument, rather
than the person’s actual position or argument.
Example: Mr. Goldberg has argued against prayer in the public schools. Obviously
Mr. Goldberg advocates atheism. But atheism is what they used to have in Russia.
Atheism leads to the suppression of all religions and the replacement of God by an
omnipotent state. Is that what we want for this country? I hardly think so. Clearly
Mr. Goldberg’s argument is nonsense.
Why this is fallacious: simply because a misrepresentation of somebody’s view is
false, this doesn’t give us any reason to think that their correctly represented view
is false.
Example: Anusar argues that workers are entitled to more of the firm’s profits than
management because they contribute more to the product. But no firm wants to
hire an employee
Why this is fallacious: That holding a certain opinion will make you stand out from
the group does not, on its own, provide any reason to think that that opinion is
false. Even though most people generally want to be included in the group and
hold the majority opinion, this doesn’t give you any reason to think that the
majority opinion is true.
Example: The studies purporting to show that barefoot running is good for you
have been discredited. However, there aren’t any studies showing that it’s not good
for you—the jury’s still out. So, you should keep running barefoot.
Example: Jamal says that we shouldn’t have a central bank because central
banking is responsible for the economic fluctuations of the business cycle. But
people have been banking for centuries. Bankers aren’t bad people, and they
provide the valuable service of providing credit to people who don’t have their
own capital.
fallacy of equivocation
The fallacy of equivocation occurs when a single word is used in two different
ways at two different stages of the argument, where validity would require that the
word be used in the same way at both stages.
Why it’s fallacious: the argument gives the appearance of validity if we don’t
realize that the word is being used in two different senses throughout the argument.
However, once we are clear about what the words mean, the argument either
becomes invalid, or else has an obviously false premise.
Amphiboly
The fallacy of amphiboly occurs when multiple meanings of a sentence are used in
a context where a) validity would require a single meaning, and b) the multiple
meanings are due to sentence structure.
Example: You say that you don’t keep your promises because it’s in your interest
to do so.
People who don’t keep their promises are immoral. So, you are immoral.
‘You don’t keep your promises because it’s in your interest to do so’ has two
different readings: either that you keep your promises, but not because it’s in your
interest—that is, your reason isn’t that it’s in your interest. Or that you don’t keep
your promises, and that’s because it’s in your interest—that is, that the fact that it’s
in your interest is your reason for not keeping your promises. In most contexts, the
former would be the reading intended. So the first sentence is only true is the
sentence is interpreted in the first way. However, the conclusion only follows if it
is interpreted in the second way.
Example: Nothing is better than Game of Thrones, and Duck Dynasty is better
than nothing.
We can infer that Duck Dynasty is better than Game of Thrones.
Composition/Division
The fallacy of composition occurs when 1) a property of the parts of an object is
improperly transferred to the object itself, or 2) a property of the individuals
belonging to a group is improperly transferred to the group.
Why it’s fallacious: wholes and parts can have different properties from one
another, as can individuals and groups. Simply because parts have a property, that
doesn’t necessarily mean that the whole does; and simply because individuals have
a property, that doesn’t necessarily mean that the group does. Similarly, simply
because the whole has a property, that doesn’t necessarily mean that the parts do;
and simply because the group has a property, that doesn’t necessarily mean that the
individuals in the group do.
False Dilemma
Two statements are contraries when they cannot both be true at once, but they can
both be false at once.
Two statements are contradictories when they cannot both be true at once, nor can
they both be false at once (at least, and at most, one of them must be true).
The fallacy of false dilemma occurs when an argument makes use of a premise that
presents contraries as though they were contradictories.
Example: Either you are with us or you are with the terrorists. If you’re leaking
classified information about our government, then you’re not with us. So, you are
with the terrorists.
Task 1: