Chapter 5 Flashcards

1
Q

4 Acceptability of Premises

A
  1. Observation
  2. a priori
  3. testimony
  4. if premise is acceptable, sub-argument is acceptable
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2
Q

7 Unacceptability of Premises

A
  1. Observation
  2. Testimony
  3. a priori
  4. weak sub-conclusion
  5. problems in language (vague, ambiguity, euphemism, loaded laguage, equivocation)
  6. contradicting (inconsistency between premises)
  7. begging the question
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3
Q

a priori statement

A

statement that can be true or false on the basis of logic and reasoning alone.

  • can derive from reason alone.
    ex: all square has four sides.
    ex: no one can steal his own property.
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4
Q

Testimony

A

based on personal experience or knowledge of others. We can believe their testimony is true unless:

  • the claim is implausible:
  • The person lacks credibility:
  • The claim goes beyond what the person could possibly know from their own experience and competence:
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5
Q

Observation

A

e

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6
Q

Common Knowledge

A

statement which is known by most people. varies from culture, time, place etc.

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7
Q

What does “a priori” mean in Latin

A

“from the first”. Knowable before experience.

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8
Q

contrasting term of “a priori”

A

a posteriori. means “from something that is posterior, or afterward”. Another word for “a posteriori” is “empirical”

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9
Q

false Testimony: Implausibility of claims

A

claim is too bizarre and crazy to even believe.

ex: I ate peanut butter and lost 40 pounds in 2 weeks.

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10
Q

false Testimony: Unreliability of Person or Source

A
  1. person is known to lie or deliberately deceive.

2. person has a flaw in them. (hearing problem, can’t rely on them for telling you how a singing concert went)

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11
Q

false Testimony: Failure to Claim to Experience and Competence

A

Can’t rely on someone saying “This mcdonald’s is the best in the world.” because clearly she hasn’t visited every mcdonalds in the world.

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