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Jeopardy. Example of what?. Multiple Choice. Deductive Or Inductive. Definition. T / F. Q $100. Q $100. Q $100. Q $100. Q $100. Q $200. Q $200. Q $200. Q $200. Q $200. Q $300. Q $300. Q $300. Q $300. Q $300. Q $400. Q $400. Q $400. Q $400. Q $400. Q $500. Q $500.
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Jeopardy Example of what? Multiple Choice Deductive Or Inductive Definition T / F Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $200 Q $200 Q $200 Q $200 Q $200 Q $300 Q $300 Q $300 Q $300 Q $300 Q $400 Q $400 Q $400 Q $400 Q $400 Q $500 Q $500 Q $500 Q $500 Q $500 Final Jeopardy
$100 Question from Definition This argument tries to prove their conclusions with rigorous, inescapable logic.
$100 Answer from Definition Deductive argument
$200 Question from Definition In this test the conclusion follows with strict necessity from the premises.
$200 Answer from Definition The strict necessity Test
$300 Question from Definition This argument tries to show that their conclusion are plausible (likely or probable), given their premises.
$300 Answer from Definition Inductive argument
$400 Question from Definition A three-line argument with two premises, one of which is a conditional.
$400 Answer from Defintion Syllogism
$500 Question from Definition Logic based on the relations of inclusion and exclusion among classes (or categories) as stated in categorical claims, that is, a three-line argument in which each statement begins with one of the words all, some, or no.
$500 Answer from Definition Categorical syllogism
$100 Question from example of what? • If A then B. B. Therefore A. • If you make a free throw, then the hoop must exist. • The hoop exists. • Therefore you make a free throw.
$100 Answer from example of what. Affirming the consequent
$200 Question from example of what? If Bill Gate owns all of the gold in Ft. Knox, he would be a wealthy man. Bill Gate does not own all of the gold in Ft. Knox. Therefore, he is not a wealthy man.
$200 Answer from example of what? Denying the Antecedent
$300 Question from example of what? It has rained in Vancouver every February since records have been kept. Therefore it will probably rain in Vancouver next February.
$300 Answer from example of what? Predictive (Inductive) argument
$400 Question from example of what? Most languages have nouns and verbs. A famous linguist from Berkeley said that.
$400 Answer from example of what? Argument from Authority (Predictive Argument)
$500 Question from example of what? As a man casts off worn-out garments and puts on others that are new, similarly, the soul, casting off worn-out bodies, enters into others, which are new. (Bhagavad-Gita)
$500 Answer from example of what. Analogy (Inductive)
$100 Question from Multiple Choice Which of the following is not a common induction indicator word or phrase? a. it logically follows that b. likely c. chances are that d. none of the above
$100 Answer from Multiple Choice a. it logically follows that
$200 Question from Multiple Choice Which of the following is not a common pattern of deductive reasoning? a. statistical argument b. categorical syllogism c. argument from elimination d. argument by definition
$200 Answer from Multiple Choice a. statistical argument
$300 Question from Mutiple Choice Denying the antecedent arguments have the following pattern: a. If A then B; if B then C; so, if A then C. b. If A then B; not A; so, not B. c. If A the B; not B; so, not A. d. If not A, then not B; not A; so, not B.
$300 Answer from Multiple Choice b. If A then B; not A; so, not B.
$400 Question from Multiple Choice The argument “No rappers are opera singers; no opera singers are professional wrestlers; so, no rappers are professional wrestlers” is an example of a. a categorical syllogism. b. an argument from definition. c. a hypothetical syllogism. d. a chain argument.
$400 Answer from Multiple Choice a. a categorical syllogism.
$500 Question from Multiple Choice A valid argument must a. be a deductive argument. b. have all true premises. c. have a true conclusion. d. all of the above
$500 Answer from Multiple Choice a. be a deductive argument.
$100 Question from True or False • No argument that has false premises • is valid. • True • False
$100 Answer from True or False • False
$200 Question from True or False • Every sound argument has a true conclusion. . • True • False
$200 Answer from True or False A. True
$300 Question from True or False If an argument is strong, then it is inductive. A. True B. False
$300 Answer from True or False A. True
$400 Question from True or False The argument “Most adult Americans own at least one television set; Brad Pitt, the famous actor, is an adult American; so, Brad Pitt owns at least one television set” is strong and cogent. A. True B. False
$400 Answer from True or False A. True
$500 Question from True or False The argument “If Atlanta is in Georgia, then Atlanta is in the South; Atlanta is in Georgia; so, Atlanta is in the South” is sound and invalid. A. True B. False
$500 Answer from True or False B. False
$100 Question from Deductive Or InductiveWHY? So far, no one has ever swum the Atlantic Ocean non-stop—or even come remotely close to doing so. It is unlikely in the extreme, therefore, that anyone taking this test will swim the Atlantic Ocean non-stop.
$200 Question from Deductive Or InductiveWHY? If a person’s destiny were determined by the astrological sign under which he or she is born, then all persons born under a particular sign would have the same destiny. But homeless persons and millionaires, paupers and presidents are born under the same sign—i.e., people born under the same sign have strikingly different destinies. It follows that a person’s destiny is not determined by the astrological sign under which he or she is born.
$300 Question from Deductive Or InductiveWHY? Dusty Rhode drives a beat-up old Volkswagen, lives in a cheap apartment, and wears shabby, threadbare clothes. It’s a good bet that Dusty does not have much money.
$400 Question from Deductive Or InductiveWHY? The Eiffel Tower is in London. London is in Germany, which is north of the Arctic Circle. It follows that the Eiffel Tower is north of the Arctic Circle.
$500 Question from Deductive Or InductiveWHY? The human mind has no size, no shape, and no spatial location. The human brain has size, shape, and spatial location. Two entities are identical only if they have all properties in common. Therefore, the human mind and the human brain are not identical.