Deduction and Induction Flashcards
1
Q
Deduction - Aristotle
A
- Regarded as one of the most long lasting and influential contributions made to civilisation.
- Other systems include Stoicism
- Kant thought that Aristotle had discovered all there was to know about logic.
- The term ‘Traditional Logic’ is used to describe the offspring of Aristotelian logic.
- The ‘book’ that contains Aristotle’s extant writings on logic is known as the Organon. This is in fact a set of 5 or 6 writings on the topic.
- Aristotle while acknowledging Induction has much less to say about it than Deduction.
2
Q
Syllogistic reasoning or logic
A
- Comes from greek for deduction
- Aristotle outlined the basic structure consisting of accepting things that are certain from the known facts.
- The structure of deductive statement is thus in two parts
- The premises (2) and
- The conclusion
- Syllogisms are thus heavily reliant on two elements;
- The ‘known-ness’ of the facts
- The linguistic understandings of the reasoners
- Two types of syllogisms in Aristotle’s system:
- Linear
- Categorical
- Linear less important for our current purpose but have a form of a linear argument. These are somewhat superfluous and add little to what is immediately obvious.
- E.g.
- You are taller than John;
- John is taller than Bill;
- Thus you are taller than Bill
- Categorical syllogistic reasoning
- Consists of two premises and a conclusion that automatically follows
- There are four types which form a 2x2 matrix. Based on two aspects: membership and coverage
- The terms for membership are “affirmation” and “negation”
- For coverage “universal” and “particular”
- Syllogisms have specific words which indicate the type of argument being put forward;
- Affirmative universal is “ALL”
- Affirmative particular “SOME”
- Negative universal “NO”
- Negative particular “SOME…NOT”
3
Q
Conditional reasoning
A
- A conditional reasoning proposition consists of an antecedent and a consequent
- They are of the form If p, then q where p is the antecedent and q is the consequent
- What follows from the proposition is a re-statement of the implications of the conditional proposition
- Two prominent
- Modus ponens or affirmation of the antecedent
- If p then q
- Given q
- Deduce p
- Modus tollens
- If p then q
- Not q
- Not p
- There are a number of other statement types which have been studied and found to be problematic from the pov of human performance.
- One of the most famous is the Wason selection test.
- Takes the form of a set of cards with an associated proposition, rule or question. E K 4 7.
- The responses of participants are invariably poor by standards of deductive logic on average between 4-10%
- To test the truth of the claim or rule logic requires that participants examine the assertion or p and the negation of the consequent i.e not q
- The performance is seen to improve dramatically when relevant content or context is introduced. For example the drinking rule.
- This raises the issue of to what extent is human reasoning context dependent and so abstract tasks are of minimal use. The latter form is called deontic reasoning.
- Theories put forward to account for deductive reasoning
- Rips Mental Rules
- Asserts that people solve deductive problems by constructing mental proofs
- These proofs consist of a set of sentences in working memory
- These sentences link premises to conclusions by inference rules
- Not following the rules occurs as a result of cognitive limitations such as working memory capacity.
- Johnson Laird’s Mental Models
- People construct mental models based on the premises of the arguments
- These models relate to real life knowledge
- People then attempt to solve the problems by attempting to construct alternatives. If none can be created then the initial model is accepted
- Mental models research is generally considered the more comprehensive and robust.
- Rips Mental Rules
4
Q
Why study reason deductively?
A
- Evans asserted in 1982 that deduction was capable of being stripped of its association which were generated by experience, training and human adaptability
- Deductive problems in a sense allow as pure a form of experimentation s possible
- This however again raises the question of normative or descriptive focus. It is appropriate to study human reasoning by placing it outside of its ecological niche?
- The findings of Deontic experiments make the point that human reasoning can follow the rules of Deductive logic to a great extent provided the context is included.
5
Q
Summary - deductive reasoning
A
- There are many forms of deductive reasoning. The most commonly studied are
- Syllogistic reasoning
- Conditional reasoning
- One of the great strengths of deductive reasoning is that if the arguments are said to be true then the conclusion is guaranteed
- Deduction does not take us beyond the assertions or premises. This is the great weakness, one cannot learn anything new.
- Syllogistic reasoning involves premises followed by a conclusion
- Conditional reasoning involves if-then statements with the form of antecedent followed by consequent
6
Q
Induction - general
A
- Induction is said to be “an activity of the mind that takes us from the observed to the unobserved”
- Induction involves “a continuous adjustment to and updating of ones confidence in a belief”
- Inductive reasoning is the most common form of everyday and scientific reasoning
- Induction is the method of human thinking can generate assertions beyond the data or premises that are used in the process of inductive reasoning.
- It is by induction that we move from ‘sample’ to ‘population’
- Induction is associated with hypothesis generation and testing
- Induction involves the continuous adjustment of one’s beliefs
- One of the pitfalls is that in going from the particular to the general a cast number of hypotheses can be generated.
- There are two types of inductive assertion:
- Strong: this is where there is good reason to accept the assertion under consideration
- Weak: here there is poor or weak support [if there is no support than we should not accept the assertion]
- Induction is one of the main topics that Hume’s critique of causation applies to.
7
Q
Induction - causal inference
A
- One of the main assertions made by Hume was that the concept of causality was the product of co-occurrence in the experience and therefore mind of the observer i.e. us
- Causation is “mental habit formed by past regularities”
- Induction is the main method of deriving causal relations. We observe “many” instances and so the events become paired. A causes B. Flame causes heat.
- Such a method is said to be a critical capability in pre-scientific method cultures and hence for early humans.
- By pairing regularly occurring events we gradually develop a model of the world and what is safe and not and what is neutral.
- Our degree of association is a result of the likelihood of events co-occurring. In other words the probability of events co-occurring is critical to rational belief.
8
Q
Induction - confirmation bias
A
- The use of induction as a method for assessing the implications of events in the world take an interesting turn. Humans are prone to belief persistence or resist belief change.
- This has shown itself in several experimental findings around the topic of confirmation bias.
- Example
- Numbers challenge task from 1st workshop.
- Many results support these findings. People are much more likely and it seems to come “naturally” to ask confirmatory questions and not disconfirmatory ones.
- These studies have been criticised on several grounds including influence of social norms, source credibility and participants may have been affirming the hypothesis.
9
Q
Abduction
A
- Concept used in philosophy to indicate the process of hypothesis generations
- More exactly it means that selection of the best explanatory hypothesis for a known set of facts
- Is almost the reverse of induction in that the conclusion is accepted and the process involves the selection of the best explanatory set of premises.
- It is applied in such areas as fault diagnosis in automated systems, belief revision which is a hallmark of scientific reasoning.
- Abduction may be seen as incorporating new information at the level of ordering of the preference of the possible worlds.