Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                

Truth and Validity - TANYA SINGH / BA-LLB 2021-26

Download as docx, pdf, or txt
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 3

Truth and validity

-TANYA SINGH / BA-LLB 2021-26

The term logic is derived from the Greek word ‘logos’ which means thought or reason and language
or expression. Logic is the study of the methods and principles used to distinguish good (correct)
from bad (incorrect) reasoning. The logician is concerned primarily with the correctness of the
completed process of reasoning. The central problem of logic is the distinction between correct and
incorrect reasoning The most important question in connection with reasoning is the question of
truth or falsity. Logic being concerned with reasoning must, therefore, deal with the nature and
conditions of truth. Truth and falsehood may be predicated of propositions, but never of arguments.
And the attributes of validity and invalidity can belong only to deductive arguments, never to
propositions. There is a connection between the validity or invalidity of an argument and the truth or
falsehood of its premisses and conclusions, but the connection is by no means a simple one. It is
important to realize that an argument may be valid while one or more of its premisses is untrue.
Arguments may exhibit differing combinations of true and false premisses and conclusions.

Some valid arguments contain only true propositions, as, for example:

All men are mortal,

All students are men,

Therefore, all students are mortal.

Some valid arguments contain entirely false proposition, as, for example:

All ten-legged creatures have wings,

All spiders have ten legs,

Therefore, all spiders have wings.

This argument is valid because, if its premisses were true, its conclusion would have to be true also,
even though in fact, they are all false.

Moreover, an argument may have premises that are all true and may have a true conclusion and
may nevertheless be invalid, as in the following example:

If the mining industry were in a sound condition the miners and the mine owners would be
contented.

The mining industry is not in sound condition.

Therefore the miners and the mine owners are not contented.

Arguments with false premisses and true conclusions may be valid or invalid.

Here is an example of a valid argument with false premises and a true conclusion:

All fishes are mammals.


All whales are fishes.

Therefore all whales are mammals.

And here is an example of an invalid argument with false premises and a true conclusion:

All mammals have wings.

All whales have wings.

Therefore all whales are mammals.

Finally, there are invalid arguments whose premises and conclusions are all false, as, for example

All mammals have wings.

All whales have wings.

Therefore all mammals are whales.

It is clear from the above examples that there are valid arguments with false conclusions as well as
invalid arguments with true conclusions. Hence, it is clear that the truth or falsity of an argument’s
conclusion does not by itself determine the validity of invalidity of that argument. And the fact that
an argument is valid does not guarantee the truth of its conclusion.

Not all of an argument's premisses must be true if the conclusion is untrue.

Also, if an argument is legitimate and its premises are accurate, we can be confident that its
conclusion is correct.

The conclusion must also be correct. Some completely valid arguments contain inaccuracies.

conclusions. At least one erroneous premiss must be present in such an argument.

We call an argument'sound' when it is valid and all of its premises are true. The

Obviously, the conclusion of a sound argument must be correct. If you're making a deductive
argument,

It's not sound since it's either not valid or not all of its premises are true, and it doesn't establish
anything.

Even if the conclusion is correct, the truth of the conclusion.


The purpose of science in general is to test the validity or falsity of premises, because The subject
matter of the premises can be anything. The logician, on the other hand, is not so much.

Interested in the logical relationships between propositions as well as their truth or falsity.

By the ‘logical’ relations between propositions, we mean those relations that determine the
correctness or incorrectness of the arguments in which they occur. The logician is interested in the
correctness even of arguments whose premises may be false. There might be a suggestion that we
ought to confine ourselves to arguments that have true premisses, ignoring all others. But as a
matter of fact, we are interested in, and must often depend on, the correctness of arguments whose
premises are not known to be true. Examples of such situations suggest themselves readily. A
scientist who is interested in verifying scientific theories by deducing testable consequences from
them does not know beforehand which theories are true. Were that known, there would be no need
for further verification. In our everyday affairs, we must often choose between alternative courses of
action.

Where these courses are genuine alternatives that cannot all be adopted, we may try to reason
about which should be chosen. Such reasoning generally involves figuring out the consequences of
each of the different actions among which we must choose. One might argue, “Suppose I choose the
first alternative, then such and such will be the case. On the other hand, assuming that I choose the
second alternative, then something else will follow”. In general, we are inclined to choose among
alternative courses of action on the basis of which set of consequences we prefer. In each case, we
are interested in reasoning correctly, rest we decide ourselves. Were we interested only in
arguments that have true premisses, we should not know which line of argument to consider until
we knew which of the alternative premisses was true. And if we knew which premiss was true, we
should not be interested in the arguments at all, because our purpose in considering the arguments
was to help us decide which alternative premises to make true. To confine our attention to
arguments with true premisses alone would be self-defeating and stultifying. So far, we have
discussed only about propositions and arguments that contain them as ‘premisses’ and ‘conclusion’.
However, these are not linguistic entities such as sentences, but what sentences may be used to
assert. Whether the actual process of thinking or reasoning requires language or not is an open
question. It may be that, thinking requires the use of symbols of some sort: words or images or what
not. It is obvious that the communication of any proposition or any argument requires symbols and
involves language. The use of language, however, complicates our problem. Certain accidental or
misleading features of their formulations in language may make more difficult the task of
investigating the logical relations among propositions. It is part of the task of the logician, therefore,
to examine language itself, primarily from the point of view of discovering and describing those
aspects of it that tend to obscure the difference between correct and incorrect argument.

You might also like