How to Understand Syllogisms

Thứ bảy - 27/04/2024 01:15
A syllogism is a logical argument composed of three parts: the major premise, the minor premise, and the conclusion inferred from the premises. Syllogisms make statements that are generally true in a particular situation. In doing so,...
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A syllogism is a logical argument composed of three parts: the major premise, the minor premise, and the conclusion inferred from the premises. Syllogisms make statements that are generally true in a particular situation. In doing so, syllogisms often provide for both compelling literature and rhetoric, as well as irrefutable argumentation.[1] Syllogisms are an integral component of the formal study of logic, and are commonly featured in aptitude tests meant to assess logical reasoning abilities.

Method 1
Method 1 of 3:

Familiarizing Yourself with the Vocabulary of Syllogisms

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Method 2
Method 2 of 3:

Identifying an Invalid Syllogism

  1. Step 2 Look for linguistic giveaways that indicate invalidity.
    Observe the affirmative or negative nature of the premises and conclusion when looking to determine validity. Note that if either of the premises is negative, the conclusion must also be negative. If both premises are affirmative, the conclusion must also be affirmative. If any of these rules are not followed, you already know the syllogism is invalid.
    • Further, at least one of a syllogism's two premises must be affirmative, as no valid conclusion can follow from two negative premises. For example, "No pencils are cats, some cats are not pets, therefore some pets are not pencils" has true premises and a true conclusion, but is invalid because of its two negative premises. If transposed, it would reach the nonsensical conclusion that some pets are pencils.
    • Further, at least one premise of a valid syllogism must contain a universal form. If both premises are particular, then no valid conclusion can follow. For example,“some cats are black" and "some black things are tables" are both particular propositions, so it cannot follow that "some cats are tables".
    • You'll often simply know that a syllogism that breaks one of these rules is invalid without thinking about it, as it will likely sound illogical.
  2. Step 4 Watch out for syllogistic fallacies.
    Syllogisms can allow for incorrect conclusions to be implied by a false argument. Consider the example: “Jesus walked on water. The green basilisk lizard walks on water. The green basilisk lizard is Jesus.” This conclusion is not necessarily true, as the middle term – in this case, “[the ability to walk on water]” – is not distributed in the conclusion.[6]
    • As another example: "All dogs love food" and "John loves food" does not logically indicate that "John is a dog." These are called fallacies of the undistributed middle, wherein a term that links the two phrases is never fully distributed.
    • Beware of the fallacy of the illicit major, too. For instance, consider: "All cats are animals. No dogs are cats. No dogs are animals." This is invalid because the major term "animals" is undistributed in the major premise – not all animals are cats, but the conclusion relies on this insinuation.
    • The same may be said of an illicit minor. For instance: "All cats are mammals. All cats are animals. All animals are mammals." This is invalid because, again, not all animals are cats, and the conclusion relies on this invalid insinuation.
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Method 3
Method 3 of 3:

Determining the Form and Figure of a Categorical Syllogism

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