1 / 31

More Basic Concepts and Practice Test 1

More Basic Concepts and Practice Test 1. Introduction to Logic: Class 2. Small Group Exercise. Each group should agree on answers to all the problems in their section. write up an answer sheet for me with all your names and agreed on answers on it. put your answers on the board.

thom
Download Presentation

More Basic Concepts and Practice Test 1

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. More Basic Concepts and Practice Test 1 Introduction to Logic: Class 2

  2. Small Group Exercise Each group should • agree on answers to all the problems in their section. • write up an answer sheet for me with all your names and agreed on answers on it. • put your answers on the board.

  3. A logically true statement or tautology is a statement that must always be true because of the way it is constructed. Examples: “Either it is raining, or it is not.” “All bachelors are unmarried.”

  4. A contradiction is a statement that must always be false because of the way it is constructed. Examples: “It is both raining and not raining.” “This figure is a round square”

  5. A contingent statement is a statement that could be true or false depending on the way the world is. Examples: “It is raining right now.” “Bob is a bachelor.”

  6. Two statements are logically equivalent if they must always have the same truth value. Examples: “Susan is shorter than Bob” and “Bob is taller than Susan” “Bob is an unmarried man” and “Bob is a bachelor.”

  7. A set of statements is inconsistent if is impossible for them to all be true at the same time. Example: “Mark is taller than Julie” “Julie is taller than Kim” “Kim is taller than Mark.”

  8. Practice Test 1

  9. 1. What is logic? Explain what logic is for the purposes of this course in 30 to 50 words.

  10. 1. What is logic? Explain what logic is for the purposes of this course in 30 to 50 words. Logic is the study of virtue in argument. In other words, it is the study of a kind of virtuous persuasion, which is likely to lead to true beliefs. Logic should be contrasted with rhetoric, which is the study of effective persuasion. This is a sample answer. Answers that get full credit can have phased many different ways as long as they capture the same basic idea.

  11. 2.Which of the following are sentences in the logical sense? (Mark all that apply.) a. my small brown dog. b. You vacuous, toffee-nosed, malodorous pervert! c. You are a vacuous, toffee-nosed, malodorous pervert. d. Don’t skip this question. e. Do you understand the concept “Sentence” as it is defined in logic?

  12. 2.Which of the following are sentences in the logical sense? (Mark all that apply.) a. my small brown dog. b. You vacuous, toffee-nosed, malodorous pervert! c. You are a vacuous, toffee-nosed, malodorous pervert. d. Don’t skip this question. e. Do you understand the concept “Sentence” as it is defined in logic?

  13. Which of the following are sentences in the logical sense? (Mark all that apply.) • (continued) f. Logic takes practice. g. Belgium is ruled by zombies. h. Frivolity is a stern taskmaster. i. How much time do you spend on homework each week? j. If you are done, but down your pencil and look bored.

  14. Which of the following are sentences in the logical sense? (Mark all that apply.) • (continued) f. Logic takes practice. g. Belgium is ruled by zombies. h. Frivolity is a stern taskmaster. i. How much time do you spend on homework each week? j. If you are done, but down your pencil and look bored.

  15. 3. Which of the following is the best definition of an argument? Check one. • a. An argument is a connected series of sentences designed to convince an audience of another sentence • b. An argument is the automatic gainsaying of whatever someone else says. • c. An argument is when two people disagree with each other. • d. An argument is an intellectual process based on contradiction.

  16. 3. Which of the following is the best definition of an argument? Check one. • a. An argument is a connected series of sentences designed to convince an audience of another sentence • b. An argument is the automatic gainsaying of whatever someone else says. -7 • c. An argument is when two people disagree with each other. -10 • d. An argument is an intellectual process based on contradiction. -4

  17. 4. Explain the concept of validity in logic in 10 to 20 words

  18. 4. Explain the concept of validity in logic in 10 to 20 words Validity is a property of arguments where the conclusion must be true if the premises are true. This is a sample answer. Answers that get full credit can have phased many different ways as long as they capture the same basic idea.

  19. 4. Explain the concept of validity in logic in 10 to 20 words An argument is valid if it is impossible for the premises to be true and the conclusion false. This is a sample answer. Answers that get full credit can have phased many different ways as long as they capture the same basic idea.

  20. 5. Which of the following arguments are valid? Mark all “valid” or “invalid.” a. If I thought this question was unfair, I wouldn’t ask it. I am asking this question I think it is fair. b. Some people are not dogs All dogs are mammals Some people are not mammals. c. If 19 species of elephant couldn’t adapt to warmer climate, they would be extinct. Nineteen species of elephant are extinct Nineteen species of elephant couldn’t adapt to warmer climate.

  21. 5. Which of the following arguments are valid? Mark all “valid” or “invalid.” a. If I thought this question was unfair, I wouldn’t ask it. I am asking this question I think it is fair.valid b. Some people are not dogs All dogs are mammals Some people are not mammals. invalid c. If 19 species of elephant couldn’t adapt to warmer climate, they would be extinct. Nineteen species of elephant are extinct Nineteen species of elephant couldn’t adapt to warmer climate. invalid

  22. 6. Put the following argument in canonical form. Be sure to eliminate indicator words and phrases and other excess words. Below the argument list any premise or conclusion indicator words. Fifty years ago there were 435 congressmen and 96 senators. Today there are 435 congressmen and 100 senators. The number of legislators is fixed; the legislature’s workload has grown exponentially. So the legislature’s work is increasingly done elsewhere, no matter what you read in you high-school civics text. (George F. Will, “More Government, Less Control,” Newsweek (July 4, 1963) Quoted in Gary Jason Introduction to Logic)

  23. 1: Fifty years ago there were 435 congressmen and 96 senators. • 2: Today there are 435 congressmen and 100 senators. • 3: The number of legislators is fixed; the legislature’s workload has grown exponentially. • The legislature’s work is increasingly done elsewhere “So” is a conclusion indicator word.

  24. 7. Mark the following “Tautology” “Contingent” or “Contradiction.” • a. Elephants dissolve in water. • b. Wood is a light, durable substance useful for building things. • c. If wood made good building material, it would be useful for building things. • d. I live in a three story building that is two stories tall. • e. If gerbils were mammals they would nurse their young.

  25. 7. Mark the following “Tautology” “Contingent” or “Contradiction.” • a. Elephants dissolve in water. Contingent • b. Wood is a light, durable substance useful for building things. Contingent • c. If wood made good building material, it would be useful for building things. Tautology • d. I live in a three story building that is two stories tall. Contradiction • e. If gerbils were mammals they would nurse their young. Tautology

  26. 8. Which of the following pairs of sentences are logically equivalent? Mark each “Logically equivalent” or “not logically equivalent.”

  27. 8. Which of the following pairs of sentences are logically equivalent? Mark each “Logically equivalent” or “not logically equivalent.”

  28. 9. Consider the following set of sentences. Which combinations of sentences form consistent sets? Mark each “consistent” or “inconsistent.” a. M1, M2, and M3 b. M2, M3, and M4. c. M2 and M3. d. M1 and M4 e. M1, M2, M3, and M4.

  29. 9. Consider the following set of sentences. Which combinations of sentences form consistent sets? Mark each “consistent” or “inconsistent.” a. M1, M2, and M3 Consistent b. M2, M3, and M4. Inconsistent c. M2 and M3. Consistent d. M1 and M4 Inconsistent e. M1, M2, M3, and M4. Inconsistent

  30. 10. Which of the following are possible? (Mark all that apply) • a. A valid argument, whose premises are all tautologies, and whose conclusion is contingent. • b. A valid argument with true premises and a false conclusion. • c. A consistent set of sentences which contains two sentences that are not logically equivalent. • d. A consistent set of sentences, all of which are contingent. • e. A false tautology.

  31. 10. Which of the following are possible? (Mark all that apply) • a. A valid argument, whose premises are all tautologies, and whose conclusion is contingent. • b. A valid argument with true premises and a false conclusion. • c. A consistent set of sentences which contains two sentences that are not logically equivalent. • d. A consistent set of sentences, all of which are contingent. • e. A false tautology.

More Related