Philosophy week 2 Flashcards
logical argument
a series of statements meant to establish a claim.
An argument proceeds from a set of premises to a conclusion, by means of logical implication, via a procedure called logical inference
statement
any unambiguous declarative sentence about a fact (or non-fact) about the world. All statements have a truth value
truth preservation
with a logically valid argument, true premises always lead to true conclusions.
logically valid argument
In a logically valid argument, the truth only preserves when all premises are true.
If NOT all premises are true, we don’t know if the conclusion is true.
invalid argument
the validity of the argument does not depend on the truth of the premises, nor the conclusion. the premises do not have logical connection that leads to the consequence even though separately everything is true
all rabbits are mortal; socrates is a person - therefore, socrates is mortal
valid vs invalid (how to judge)
To judge if each is valid or invalid, ask the question, “If the premises are true, would we be locked in to accepting the conclusion?”If the answer is “yes,” then the argument is valid.If the answer is “no,” then the argument is invalid.
affirming the antecedents
if A then B
X is A
Thus, X is B
denying the consequent
If A then B
X is not B
Thus, X is not A
affirming the consequent
if A then B
X is B
Thus, X is A
the logic is invalid
Denying the antecedent
if A then B
X is not A
Thus, X is not B
the logic is invalid
role congruity theory
a group will be positively evaluated when its characteristics are recognised as aligning with that group’s typical social roles
The stereotype fit hypothesis
suggests that group members will experience discrimination in different social roles or positions to the extent that their group stereotypically does not have characteristics associated with success in the position.
logical positivism
a form ofpositivism, developed by members of the Vienna Circle, which considers that the only meaningfulphilosophicalproblems are those which can be solved by logical analysis.
Central idea: we should look for verification
rationalism
purely based on thinking, thinking is the basis for all knowledge (if you observe, you see sunset - but this may be not true cause it is just an observation: you see the sun and you think the sun is going down, but actually the earth is rotating so it seems like this)
the problem with rationalism:
-we need to put input ourselves, the empirical content, otherwise, knowledge is empirically meaningless, not logically meaningless, but empirically meaningless
empiricism
(purely based on observations)
the problem with empiricism:
-we are limited by our ability to observe;
-observations can be wrong (sunset);
-sometimes we simply cannot observe.
→there is no laws of theory