Logic 1.3 True/False
A geometrical proof is an example of an inductive argument.
False
Most arguments based on statistical reasoning are deductive.
False
If an argument contains the phrase "it definitely follows that," then we know for certain that the argument is deductive
False
An argument that predicts what will happen in the future, based on what has happened in the past, is an inductive argument.
True
An argument that proceeds from knowledge of a cause to knowledge of an effect is an inductive argument
True
If the conclusion of an argument follows merely from the definition of a word used in a premise, the argument is deductive
True
In a deductive argument, the conclusion is not supposed to contain more information than the premises
True
In an inductive argument, it is intended that the conclusion contain more information than the premises
True
The actual strength of the link between premises and conclusion may allow one to determine whether an argument is inductive or deductive.
True
The form of argumentation the arguer uses may allow one to determine whether an argument is inductive or deductive.
True
An argument that draws a conclusion about a thing based on that thing's similarity to something else is a deductive argument.
False
An argument that draws a conclusion that something is true because someone has said that it is, is a deductive argument.
False
An argument that presents two alternatives and eliminates one, leaving the other as the conclusion, is an inductive argument
False
Deductive arguments always proceed from the general to the particular.
False
Inductive arguments always proceed from the particular to the general.
False