Beginning Logic Flashcards

0
Q

If… statements can become part of other statements, how are the new statements referred to?

A

sorites

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1
Q

What are the two parts of if…then… statements?

What are these two parts?

A

Antecedent, Consequent.

sub-statements of a whole statement.

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2
Q

The words Like and Every allow for what?

A

categorization into sets and subsets

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3
Q

Which words reveal overlapping sets? What is an overlapping called?

A

some, there is, there exists: intersections

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4
Q

What words reveal the absence of an overlapping set?

A

no, there is no, none

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5
Q

What are the three steps to building logical arguments?

A

1.figure out what we know to be true 2.spend time thinking about what we know is true 3.find the best course of action

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6
Q

What are the two components of arguments?

A

premises at the beginning, conclusion at the end

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7
Q

What is a premise?

A

facts of the matter or what is believed to be true

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8
Q

What is a conclusion?

A

outcome of the argument

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9
Q

When is validity determined?

A

When a conclusion necessarily follows from the premises

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10
Q

what is an enthymeme?

A

hidden premises within an argument, rhetoric

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11
Q

What are the three laws of thought according to Bertrand Russell?

A
  1. The law of Identity: every individual thing is identical to itself
  2. The law of the excluded middle: every statement is true or false
  3. The law of non-contradiction: given a statement and its opposite one is true and one is false.
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12
Q

What is the foundation of math?

A

logic

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13
Q

What is a syllogism?

A
  1. argument structure that is designed to appear indisputably valid.
  2. accepting the premises means necessarily accepts the conclusion.
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14
Q

What is a categorical statement?

A

statements that talk about whole groups of people or things

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15
Q

How many types of categorical statements are there? What are they? What are their definitions?

A

two: 1. universal statements tell something about an entire category 2.particular statements tell of the existence of one example within a category

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16
Q

What is the function of a square of opposition?

A
  1. organizes the four basic categorical statements of syllogisms
  2. to show the sixteen possible statements of universals and particulars relations to one another
17
Q

What are the symbols representing universal and particular statements within the square of opposition?

A

universal: A,E particular: I,O

18
Q

Give an example of an universal A statement?

A
  1. all cats are sleeping
19
Q

Give an universal E statement?

A
  1. no cats are sleeping
20
Q

Say a particular I statement?

A
  1. some cats are sleeping
21
Q

Say a particular O statement?

A
  1. not all cats are sleeping
22
Q

Statements positioned diagonally within the square of opposition have a specific relationship, what is it? What are the diagonally positioned symbols?

A

they are contradictory, uA opposes pO, pI opposes uE

23
Q

What is an axiom?

A

statements that are considered to be self evident

24
Q

what is a theorem?

A

statements that Euclid thought needed proof

25
Q

What is Indirect Proof?

A

assume the opposite of what you want to prove and show how that belief leads to false conclusions.
also known as Proof by Contradiction

26
Q

What is symbolic logic?

A

computable symbols stand for words and statements

27
Q

What is Boolean algebra?

A

first form of symbolic logic where 1=true and 0=false +=or x=and

28
Q

What is a set? Describe the significance of set theory?

A

a collection of things that may or may not have something in common
set theory is the foundation of logic

29
Q

what are the two interlocking systems of Frege’s formal logic?

A

sentential logic and quantifier logic

30
Q

what is sentential logic?

A

sentential(predicate) logic allows letters to stand for simple statements which are linked together with symbols.
the symbols stand for key concepts: not, and, or, if, if and only if

31
Q

What is Quantifier logic?

A

uses the rules of sentential logic but adds rules allowing for the symbolization of subject and predicate

32
Q

What is Godels Proof?

A

The Incompleteness Theorem states any attempt to reduce math to a complete set of axioms leads to an infinite number of undecidable statements, truths, that cannot be proven within the set of axioms.

33
Q

What is the definition of logic?

A

the study of argument validity

34
Q

What characterizes a valid argument?

A

true premises and a necessarily true conclusion, the form in which this takes place

35
Q

In logic what are arguments?

A

sets of premises followed by conclusions, connected by intermediate statements

36
Q

That a statement is true or false is indicative of what?

A

the statements truth value

37
Q

A sound argument has what properties?

A

the argument must be valid with true premises

38
Q

What is deduction?

A

start with a set of possibilities and reduce until a smaller subset remains

39
Q

What is induction?

A

start with a limited number of possibilities and increase that number of possibilities