LOGIC FOR ORAL RECIT
deductive argument
an argument incorporating the claim that it is impossible for the conclusion to be false given that the premises are true. it involves necessary reasoning
inductive reasoning
an argument incorporating the claim that it is improbable that conclusion be false given that the premises are true, it involves probabilistic reasoning
argument from authority
an argument that concludes something is true because a presumed expert has said that it is true
argument from analogy
an argument that depends on the existence of similarity between two states of affair
generalization
an argument that proceeds from our knowledge of a selected sample to some claim about the whole group
prediction
an argument that proceeds from our past knowledge of the past to a claim about the future
causal inference
an argument that proceeds from the knowledge of a cause to a claim about an effect
argument based on signs
an argument that proceeds from the knowledge of a sign to a claim a sign symbolizes
categorical syllogism
an argument which each statement begins with the words "all", "no", or "some"
hypothetical syllogism
an argument which each statement has a conditional "if...then" in one or both of its premises
disjunctive syllogism
an argument which has a disjunctive "either... or..." in a premise
unsound argument
but if the argument is invalid and has one or more false premises then it is an _____
sound argument
if a deductive argument is valid and all premises are true then it is a ______
syllogism
is an argument consisting two premises and one conclusion
valid deductive argument
is an argument in which it is impossible for the conclusion to be false given that the premises are true
strong inductive argument
is an argument in which it is improbable that the conclusion be false given that the premises are true
invalid deductive argument
is an argument in which it is possible for the conclusion to be false given that the premises is true
weak inductive argument
is an argument in which the conclusion does not follow probably from the premises, even though it is claimed to
inductive cogent argument
is an argument that is strong and has all the premises true by meeting the total evidences required which makes the conclusion to be true than false
inductive uncogent argument
is an argument that is weak, has one or more false premises and fails to meet the total evidences required which makes the conclusion more likely to be false than true
validity
it is not something that is uniformly determined by the actual truth or falsity of the premises and conclusion, rather it is determined by the relationship between the two
supports
it is not whether the premises and conclusion is true or false, but whether if the premises ____ the conclusion
argument based on mathematics
the conclusion depends on some purely arithmetic or geometric computation or measurement
argument from definition
the conclusion is claimed to depend merely on the definition of some word or phrase used in the premise or conclusion.
(1) special indicator words, (2) actual strength of the inferential link between premises and conclusion, and (3) character or form of argumentation
to interpret an argument's inferential claim we look at three factors: