Lecture 22: Deductive Reasoning Flashcards
Types of deductive Reasoning Problems
- Quantifier: All, no, some, some not
- Comparative/Relational: A>B>C therefore A>C
- Conditional: If-then statements
Validity
Follows the premises
Truth
Is not false
Conversion
Many mistakes people make are not valid but would be if the premises were adjusted
Sound Argument
An argument that is both valid and true
Formal rule theories: explanations of errors, theoretical problems
assumes we have a mental logic built in, and we apply those rules to figure out problems
* We make mistakes because premises are misinterpreted or some logical rules are less available than other, or you can’t find a proof
* Problems are that content effects exist and also they assume that our mental architecture has these built in, but we hardly have to do deductive reasoning in real life
Mental model theory: explanation of errors, theoretical problems
- The way we reason is we build mental models in which the premises are true and try to find out what else is true
- Based on how many are true we can infer the validity of the problem
- Make mistakes b/c of working memory limitations; can only have so many mental models at once
- Would we really be built with this mechanism in our brain?
Verbal reasoning theory: explanation of errors
- Says that we apply language processing to deduce things
- We make mistakes because language is not adapted to the needs of deduction
Competence
what people are capable of in principle
Principle
what people do in practice
Paradox of Rationality
People are bad at solving deductive reasoning, and yet we are rational
Valid Rules
- Modus ponens: if A implies B and be is true then A is true
- Modus tollens: opposite ^
Invalid rules
- Affirming the consequent: If A implies B then and A is true then B is true
- Denying the antecedent: If A implies B and A is not true then B is false