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Inductive & Deductive Logic. Kirszner & Mandell White and Billings. Deductive Reasoning. Deductive Reasoning proceeds from a general premise or assumption to a specific conclusion If all statements in the argument are true then the conclusion must also be true. Deduction. Syllogism
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Inductive & Deductive Logic Kirszner & Mandell White and Billings
Deductive Reasoning • Deductive Reasoning proceeds from a general premise or assumption to a specific conclusion • If all statements in the argument are true then the conclusion must also be true
Deduction • Syllogism • Major Premise (general statement) • Minor Premise (more specific statement) • Conclusion (drawn from premise)
Examples of Syllogism • Jesse Owens • All Olympic runners are fast • Jesse Owens was an Olympic runner • Therefore, Jesse Owens was fast • Declaration of Independence • Tyrannical Rulers deserve no loyalty • King George III is a tyrannical ruler • Therefore, King George III deserves no loyalty
Illogical Syllogisms • Dogs and Cats • All dogs are animals • All cats are animals • Therefore, all dogs are cats • Ralph and the Dog • All dogs are animals • Ralph is an animal • Therefore, Ralph is a dog Problems Two major premises Undistributed vs. Distributed (some items) vs. (all items) The minor premise must refer to the term in the major premise that is distributed.
Deduction • Valid Argument – when conclusion follows logically from major and minor premises. If your audience accepts your major and minor premise then they will be more likely to accept your conclusion.
Deductive Practice • Try to write a syllogism for your argument that you are thinking about covering in you research paper. • Write it on a blank piece of paper with your name in the top right corner. • Trade w/ the opposite gender • Trade w/ someone with similar hair • Trade w/ someone who you don’t trade with
Inductive Reasoning • Inductive Reasoning proceeds from individual observations to a more general conclusion and uses no strict form. • All relevant evidence be stated and that the conclusion fit the evidence better than any other conclusion.
Inductive • First you decide on a question to be answered, or a hypothesis • Second – Gather evidence • Third – move from evidence to conclusion by way of inference
Inductive • Question: How did that living-room window get broken? • Evidence: There is a baseball on the living room floor. The baseball was not there this morning. Some children were playing baseball this afternoon. They were playing in a vacant lot across from the window. They stopped playing a little while ago. They aren’t in the vacant lot now. • Conclusion: One of the children hit or threw the ball through the window; then, they all ran away.
Inductive Practice • Try to write a hypothesis or Question for your research paper then list some of the evidence you need to uncover in order to prove your hypothesis • Write this on the opposite side of your Syllogism • Trade with three other people – try to find holes in the evidence or alternate conclusions • (i.e. what about …? OR Did you consider …?)