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DEDUCTIVE ARGUMENTS The aim of this tutorial is to help you learn to recognize, analyze, and evaluate deductive arguments.

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Page 1: DEDUCTIVE ARGUMENTS The aim of this tutorial is to help you learn to recognize, analyze, and evaluate deductive arguments

DEDUCTIVE ARGUMENTS

The aim of this tutorial is to help you learn to recognize, analyze, and evaluate deductive arguments.

Page 2: DEDUCTIVE ARGUMENTS The aim of this tutorial is to help you learn to recognize, analyze, and evaluate deductive arguments

Deductive arguments

A deductive argument claims that its conclusion necessarily follows from the premises.

Certain words and phrases are commonly used in deductive arguments; these include certainly, absolutely, definitely, conclusively, must be, and it necessarily follows that. However, not all deductive arguments contain indicator words.

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Page 3: DEDUCTIVE ARGUMENTS The aim of this tutorial is to help you learn to recognize, analyze, and evaluate deductive arguments

Deductive arguments and syllogisms

Deductive arguments are often presented in the form of syllogisms, with two supporting premises and a conclusion.

A deductive argument is valid if the form of the argument is such that the conclusion must be true if the premises are true. The form of an argument is determined by its layout or pattern of reasoning. An argument is sound if both it is (1) valid, and (2) the premises are true.

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Page 4: DEDUCTIVE ARGUMENTS The aim of this tutorial is to help you learn to recognize, analyze, and evaluate deductive arguments

Types of deductive arguments

There are several types of deductive arguments. Three types are used in everyday reasoning:

Arguments by elimination rule out different possibilities until only one possibility remains.

Arguments based on mathematics depend on mathematical or geometric equations to generate conclusions.

In an argument from definition, the conclusion is true because it is based on a key term or essential attribute in a definition.

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Page 5: DEDUCTIVE ARGUMENTS The aim of this tutorial is to help you learn to recognize, analyze, and evaluate deductive arguments

Hypothetical syllogisms

Hypothetical reasoning involves “If…then…” reasoning.

A hypothetical syllogism is a form of deductive argument that contains two premises, at least one of which is a hypothetical or conditional if…then statement.

There are three basic patterns of hypothetical syllogisms: modus ponens (affirming the antecedent) modus tollens (denying the consequent) chain arguments

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Page 6: DEDUCTIVE ARGUMENTS The aim of this tutorial is to help you learn to recognize, analyze, and evaluate deductive arguments

Modus ponens arguments

In a modus ponens argument, the following structure is used:

If A, then B.

A.

Therefore, B.

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Page 7: DEDUCTIVE ARGUMENTS The aim of this tutorial is to help you learn to recognize, analyze, and evaluate deductive arguments

Modus tollens arguments

In a modus tollens argument, the following structure is used:

If A, then B.

Not B.

Therefore, not A.

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Page 8: DEDUCTIVE ARGUMENTS The aim of this tutorial is to help you learn to recognize, analyze, and evaluate deductive arguments

Chain arguments

In chain arguments, the following structure is used:

If A, then B.

If B, then C.

Therefore, If A, then C.

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Page 9: DEDUCTIVE ARGUMENTS The aim of this tutorial is to help you learn to recognize, analyze, and evaluate deductive arguments

Using hypothetical syllogisms

Not all valid arguments are sound. Rewording arguments in ordinary language in the form of hypothetical syllogisms can help you expose faulty premises. They are also useful as clarification tools, and as decision-making aids.

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Page 10: DEDUCTIVE ARGUMENTS The aim of this tutorial is to help you learn to recognize, analyze, and evaluate deductive arguments

Categorical syllogisms

Categorical syllogisms are a type of deductive argument that sorts things into specific classes or groups. It is composed of a conclusion, two premises, and three terms, each of which occurs exactly twice in two of the three propositions.

Categorical syllogisms can be written in any of 256 standard forms or combinations.

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Page 11: DEDUCTIVE ARGUMENTS The aim of this tutorial is to help you learn to recognize, analyze, and evaluate deductive arguments

Standard form categorical syllogisms

A standard form for categorical syllogisms is shown here:

All P are/are not M. (P=predicate, M=middle term) Some S are/are not M. (S=minor term, M=middle term) Some S are/are not P. (S=minor term, P=major term)

As with hypothetical syllogisms, if the form of a categorical syllogism is valid, then the argument will be valid regardless of term substitutions.

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Page 12: DEDUCTIVE ARGUMENTS The aim of this tutorial is to help you learn to recognize, analyze, and evaluate deductive arguments

Quality and qualifier

Each proposition in a standard-form categorical syllogism is written in one of four forms based on quality (universal or particular) and qualifier (affirmative or negative).

Three forms predominate Universal affirmative: All S are P Universal negative: No S are P Particular affirmative: Some S are P

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Page 13: DEDUCTIVE ARGUMENTS The aim of this tutorial is to help you learn to recognize, analyze, and evaluate deductive arguments

Venn diagrams

Venn diagrams are useful instruments for diagramming and evaluating categorical syllogisms. They directly engage our spatial reasoning ability and help us to visualize group relationships effectively.

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Page 14: DEDUCTIVE ARGUMENTS The aim of this tutorial is to help you learn to recognize, analyze, and evaluate deductive arguments

Translating arguments into standard categorical form

Rewrite each proposition in standard-form, starting with the conclusion.

Use the context and grammar of the original argument to decide on which qualifier to use.

Identify the three terms in the argument. Where necessary, rewrite each term as a noun or noun

phrase. Each proposition uses a form of the to be verb. Assemble in standard form: major premise, minor

premise, conclusion.

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Page 15: DEDUCTIVE ARGUMENTS The aim of this tutorial is to help you learn to recognize, analyze, and evaluate deductive arguments

Conclusions

Knowledge of deductive arguments—including arguments from definition, mathematical arguments, arguments by elimination, and hypothetical and categorical syllogisms—is essential for us to effectively function in the world. As good critical thinkers, we must constantly identify and evaluate these types of arguments, both our own and those presented to us by others.

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