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Constructing Arguments:


Inductive &
Deductive
Reasoning
What is an Argument?
An argument is a
form of thinking
in which certain
statements
(reasons) are
offered in
support of
another
statement
(conclusion).
Reasoning




 Thinking that uses statements of reason
       in support of conclusions.
Reason
   The faculty of reason (rationality) is a mental ability found in
    human beings and normally considered to be a definitive
    characteristic of human nature. It is closely associated with such
    human activities as language, science, art, mathematics, and
    philosophy.

   Reason is the way rational beings propose and consider
    explanations concerning cause and effect, true and false, and what
    is good or bad. The ways in which human beings reason through an
    argument are the subject of inquiries in the field of logic.
   Reasons—Statements that support another
    statement (known as the conclusion). Reasons
    justify a conclusion, or make it more probable.

   Conclusion—A statement that explains,
    asserts or predicts on the basis of statements
    known as reasons that are offered as evidence
    for it.
Inductive Reasoning
Inductive Reasoning:
        An argument form in which one reasons from premises that
        are known or assumed to be true to a conclusion that is
        supported by the premises but does not necessarily follow
        from them.




The kind of thinking that is done to form general ideas based
on experience and observation.

Inductive reasoning allows us to create generalizations about
things, such as people, places, events, the environment, etc.
Inductive Reasoning:

   The process of recognizing patterns or
    observing patterns and drawing a conclusion
    based on that pattern.

   Reasoning from a specific case or cases and
    deriving a general rule.
Inductive Reasoning:


   by example
   by cause
   by authority
   by sign
   by analogy
By Example



 Owls turning head
 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8TL8pSFd-hQ&NR=1&feature=fvwp

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hoc42xegVt8&NR=1

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h-jtQZwPPGQ


 We can induce from these examples that owls (or most or many owls)
         have the ability to turn their heads in a unique way.
By Cause
Argument by cause
attempts to establish
a cause and effect
relationship between
two events. The link
below gives us a
causal explanation
for the owl’s ability to
turn its head.




Owl head-turning explained—also an authority speaking on her area of expertise
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pBe4Kz0RsKE
By Authority
A person who is a
legitimate expert is more
likely to be right than
wrong when making
considered claims within
her area of expertise. The
claim is being accepted
because it is reasonable
to believe that the expert
has tested the claim and
found it to be reliable.


 here’s an authority on wild cheetahs
 http://izismile.com/2011/04/20/woman_confronts_wild_cheetahs_then_pets_one.html
By Sign
This is in some ways a
type of tightly linked
cause and effect
reasoning that has more
certainty. Footprints are
an indication that
someone has walked by
recently. The sun rising
is a sign of the morning.




 Here’s Sherlock Holmes inferring many truths from a hat
 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1bCS4icTrH0
By Analogy/Comparison




     if it quacks like a duck…
Inductive conclusions are
established in four stages:
•   Observation: collect facts, without bias.
•   Analysis: classify the facts, identifying patterns of regularity.
•   Inference: From the patterns, infer generalizations about the
    relations between the facts.
•   Confirmation: Testing the inference through further
    observation.
Opinion Polls




 A recent Gallop Poll reported that 74% of the American
 Public believes abortion should be legal.

 A poll is a form of empirical generalization, a general
 statement about an entire group made on the basis of
 observing some members of the group.
Questions to Ask About Polls

      Is the sample known?
      Is the sample sufficient?
      Is the sample representative?
      Do the conclusion seem reliable?
      Why or why not?
Inductive arguments can include:

 • Part-to-whole: where the whole is assumed to be like
   individual parts (only bigger).

 • Extrapolations: where areas beyond the area of study
   are assumed to be like the studied area.

 • Predictions: where the future is assumed to be like the
   past.
Deductive Reasoning
   Deductive reasoning starts with a general case
    in order to draw conclusions about specific
    instances.
   Deductive reasoning starts with an assumed
    hypothesis, theory or truth. This assumption
    may be well-accepted or rather shaky—but if it’s
    true, the conclusion can not be questioned.
   Deductive reasoning is used by scientists to
    take a general scientific law and apply it to a
    certain case when they assume that the law is
    true.
All planets revolve around stars.
           The earth is a planet.
Therefore the earth revolves around a star.
   The earth revolves around the sun.
      Therefore the sun is a star.
   Deductive reasoning assumes that the basic law
    from which you argue is applicable in all cases.
   Scientists will prove a general law for a
    particular case and then do many deductive
    experiments to demonstrate that the law holds
    true in many different circumstances.
   Using deductive reasoning usually is a credible
    and safe form of reasoning, but it is based on
    the assumed truth of the rule or law on which it
    is founded.
Deductive arguments are
generally based on the
following:
    laws

    rules

    widely accepted principles

    theories

    hypotheses
Deductive Reasoning

  Premise
  Premise
  Conclusion
Deduction begins with the general and
       ends with the specific.



  All men are mortal
  Socrates is a man
  Therefore Socrates is mortal.
                                  syllogism
A syllogism

     The
 syllogism is
at the core of
  traditional
  deductive
 reasoning.

 cartoon
Valid Argument: An argument in
which the reasons support the
conclusions so that the conclusion
follows the reasons offered.

Invalid Argument: An argument in
which the reasons do not support the
conclusion so that the conclusion does
not follow from the reasons offered.
What’s Wrong with this?

 Penguins are black and white.
 Some old TV shows are black and
  white.
 Therefore some penguins are old
  TV shows.
All men are mortal.
Socrates is mortal.
Therefore Socrates is man.
              not a valid argument, why?
THE general Rule:
Syllogism: THE general Rule
Premise: Birds fly
Deductive Reasoning
 If   the premises are true, the
       conclusion is also true.
A DEDUCTIVE ARGUMENT




    Premise   1: Birds fly.
    Premise   2: An owl is a
     bird.
    Conclusion: Owls fly.


           owl flying
But Is the premise
     correct?

      Do birds fly?
Test Your Premise

Remember: The general rule tells us
that the basic law from which you
are arguing must be applicable in all
cases.
AN UNSOUND ARGUMENT:
AN UNSOUND ARGUMENT:




    Valid structure, but invalid premise(s).
Checking our premises:
          Is a penguin is a bird?
          BBC: Do Penguins Fly?
          From the BBC
          http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9dfWzp7rYR4


          BBC Explanation
          http://www.youtube.com/watch?
          v=lzhDsojoqk8&feature=watch_response
Premises
  Birds. Class *Aves. Birds are feathered,
  winged, bipedal, warm-blooded, egg-laying
  vertebrates.
           Aves is Latin for birds and is universally used as
           the scientific term for the class of organisms to
           which birds belong.


Either our premise that all birds fly is wrong, or our premise
that penguins are birds is wrong.
If, by definition penguins are feathered, winged, bipedal,
warm-blooded, egg-laying vertebrates, then they are
birds. The next question has to be, do all birds fly or
just some?

If the answer is “some,” then your premise, “birds fly”
is wrong, and therefore your conclusion is wrong.

From Wikipedia:
“All living species of birds have wings—the now extinct flightless
moa of New Zealand were the only exception. Wings are evolved
forelimbs, and most bird species can fly. Flightless birds include
ratites, penguins, and a number of diverse endemic island species.”
In deductive reasoning you must
 expain and defend the premises
There is no way to admit the truth of a premise and
          deny the truth of the conclusion.


           premise: birds fly
      premise: a penguin is a bird
        conclusion: penguins fly
Penguins (order
Sphenisciformes,
family Spheniscidae)
are a group of
aquatic, flightless
birds living almost
exclusively in the
southern hemisphere,
especially in
Antarctica.
True reasons, valid structure = Sound Argument
 False reasons, valid structure = Unsound Argument
True reasons, invalid structure = Unsound Argument
False reasons, invalid structure = Unsound Argument
modus tollens
      denying the consequence

• If Michael is a good friend, he will loan
  me his car for the weekend.
• Michael won’t loan me his car.
• Therefore Michael is not a good friend.
Silver Blaze
modus tollens
                   denying the consequence

             From Sherlock Holmes, Silver Blaze

   Dogs bark at strangers.
   The dog didn’t bark when the horse disappeared.
   Therefore whoever took the horse away was not a
    stranger.
Induction/Deduction

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Induction/Deduction

  • 1.
  • 3. What is an Argument?
  • 4. An argument is a form of thinking in which certain statements (reasons) are offered in support of another statement (conclusion).
  • 5. Reasoning Thinking that uses statements of reason in support of conclusions.
  • 6. Reason  The faculty of reason (rationality) is a mental ability found in human beings and normally considered to be a definitive characteristic of human nature. It is closely associated with such human activities as language, science, art, mathematics, and philosophy.  Reason is the way rational beings propose and consider explanations concerning cause and effect, true and false, and what is good or bad. The ways in which human beings reason through an argument are the subject of inquiries in the field of logic.
  • 7. Reasons—Statements that support another statement (known as the conclusion). Reasons justify a conclusion, or make it more probable.  Conclusion—A statement that explains, asserts or predicts on the basis of statements known as reasons that are offered as evidence for it.
  • 9. Inductive Reasoning: An argument form in which one reasons from premises that are known or assumed to be true to a conclusion that is supported by the premises but does not necessarily follow from them. The kind of thinking that is done to form general ideas based on experience and observation. Inductive reasoning allows us to create generalizations about things, such as people, places, events, the environment, etc.
  • 10. Inductive Reasoning:  The process of recognizing patterns or observing patterns and drawing a conclusion based on that pattern.  Reasoning from a specific case or cases and deriving a general rule.
  • 11. Inductive Reasoning:  by example  by cause  by authority  by sign  by analogy
  • 12. By Example Owls turning head http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8TL8pSFd-hQ&NR=1&feature=fvwp http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hoc42xegVt8&NR=1 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h-jtQZwPPGQ We can induce from these examples that owls (or most or many owls) have the ability to turn their heads in a unique way.
  • 13. By Cause Argument by cause attempts to establish a cause and effect relationship between two events. The link below gives us a causal explanation for the owl’s ability to turn its head. Owl head-turning explained—also an authority speaking on her area of expertise http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pBe4Kz0RsKE
  • 14. By Authority A person who is a legitimate expert is more likely to be right than wrong when making considered claims within her area of expertise. The claim is being accepted because it is reasonable to believe that the expert has tested the claim and found it to be reliable. here’s an authority on wild cheetahs http://izismile.com/2011/04/20/woman_confronts_wild_cheetahs_then_pets_one.html
  • 15. By Sign This is in some ways a type of tightly linked cause and effect reasoning that has more certainty. Footprints are an indication that someone has walked by recently. The sun rising is a sign of the morning. Here’s Sherlock Holmes inferring many truths from a hat http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1bCS4icTrH0
  • 16. By Analogy/Comparison if it quacks like a duck…
  • 17. Inductive conclusions are established in four stages: • Observation: collect facts, without bias. • Analysis: classify the facts, identifying patterns of regularity. • Inference: From the patterns, infer generalizations about the relations between the facts. • Confirmation: Testing the inference through further observation.
  • 18. Opinion Polls A recent Gallop Poll reported that 74% of the American Public believes abortion should be legal. A poll is a form of empirical generalization, a general statement about an entire group made on the basis of observing some members of the group.
  • 19. Questions to Ask About Polls  Is the sample known?  Is the sample sufficient?  Is the sample representative?  Do the conclusion seem reliable?  Why or why not?
  • 20. Inductive arguments can include: • Part-to-whole: where the whole is assumed to be like individual parts (only bigger). • Extrapolations: where areas beyond the area of study are assumed to be like the studied area. • Predictions: where the future is assumed to be like the past.
  • 21.
  • 23. Deductive reasoning starts with a general case in order to draw conclusions about specific instances.  Deductive reasoning starts with an assumed hypothesis, theory or truth. This assumption may be well-accepted or rather shaky—but if it’s true, the conclusion can not be questioned.  Deductive reasoning is used by scientists to take a general scientific law and apply it to a certain case when they assume that the law is true.
  • 24. All planets revolve around stars. The earth is a planet. Therefore the earth revolves around a star. The earth revolves around the sun. Therefore the sun is a star.
  • 25. Deductive reasoning assumes that the basic law from which you argue is applicable in all cases.  Scientists will prove a general law for a particular case and then do many deductive experiments to demonstrate that the law holds true in many different circumstances.  Using deductive reasoning usually is a credible and safe form of reasoning, but it is based on the assumed truth of the rule or law on which it is founded.
  • 26. Deductive arguments are generally based on the following:  laws  rules  widely accepted principles  theories  hypotheses
  • 27. Deductive Reasoning Premise Premise Conclusion
  • 28. Deduction begins with the general and ends with the specific. All men are mortal Socrates is a man Therefore Socrates is mortal. syllogism
  • 29. A syllogism The syllogism is at the core of traditional deductive reasoning. cartoon
  • 30. Valid Argument: An argument in which the reasons support the conclusions so that the conclusion follows the reasons offered. Invalid Argument: An argument in which the reasons do not support the conclusion so that the conclusion does not follow from the reasons offered.
  • 31.
  • 32. What’s Wrong with this?  Penguins are black and white.  Some old TV shows are black and white.  Therefore some penguins are old TV shows.
  • 33. All men are mortal. Socrates is mortal. Therefore Socrates is man. not a valid argument, why?
  • 37. Deductive Reasoning  If the premises are true, the conclusion is also true.
  • 38. A DEDUCTIVE ARGUMENT  Premise 1: Birds fly.  Premise 2: An owl is a bird.  Conclusion: Owls fly. owl flying
  • 39. But Is the premise correct? Do birds fly?
  • 40. Test Your Premise Remember: The general rule tells us that the basic law from which you are arguing must be applicable in all cases.
  • 42. AN UNSOUND ARGUMENT: Valid structure, but invalid premise(s).
  • 43. Checking our premises: Is a penguin is a bird? BBC: Do Penguins Fly? From the BBC http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9dfWzp7rYR4 BBC Explanation http://www.youtube.com/watch? v=lzhDsojoqk8&feature=watch_response
  • 44. Premises Birds. Class *Aves. Birds are feathered, winged, bipedal, warm-blooded, egg-laying vertebrates. Aves is Latin for birds and is universally used as the scientific term for the class of organisms to which birds belong. Either our premise that all birds fly is wrong, or our premise that penguins are birds is wrong.
  • 45. If, by definition penguins are feathered, winged, bipedal, warm-blooded, egg-laying vertebrates, then they are birds. The next question has to be, do all birds fly or just some? If the answer is “some,” then your premise, “birds fly” is wrong, and therefore your conclusion is wrong. From Wikipedia: “All living species of birds have wings—the now extinct flightless moa of New Zealand were the only exception. Wings are evolved forelimbs, and most bird species can fly. Flightless birds include ratites, penguins, and a number of diverse endemic island species.”
  • 46. In deductive reasoning you must expain and defend the premises There is no way to admit the truth of a premise and deny the truth of the conclusion. premise: birds fly premise: a penguin is a bird conclusion: penguins fly
  • 47. Penguins (order Sphenisciformes, family Spheniscidae) are a group of aquatic, flightless birds living almost exclusively in the southern hemisphere, especially in Antarctica.
  • 48. True reasons, valid structure = Sound Argument False reasons, valid structure = Unsound Argument True reasons, invalid structure = Unsound Argument False reasons, invalid structure = Unsound Argument
  • 49. modus tollens denying the consequence • If Michael is a good friend, he will loan me his car for the weekend. • Michael won’t loan me his car. • Therefore Michael is not a good friend.
  • 51. modus tollens denying the consequence From Sherlock Holmes, Silver Blaze  Dogs bark at strangers.  The dog didn’t bark when the horse disappeared.  Therefore whoever took the horse away was not a stranger.

Hinweis der Redaktion

  1. Premises about the correlation of two things can indicate a causal relationship between them, but additional factors must be confirmed to establish the exact form of the causal relationship. Argument by cause attempts to establish a cause and effect relationship between two events. This is a form of reasoning that argues that the interactions of two or more incidents are not merely coincidental, but was actually related in some meaningful way.
  2. Despite the inherent weakness in this argument, a person who is a legitimate expert is more likely to be right than wrong when making considered claims within her area of expertise. In a sense, the claim is being accepted because it is reasonable to believe that the expert has tested the claim and found it to be reliable. So, if the expert has found it to be reliable, then it is reasonable to accept it as being true. Thus, the listener is accepting a claim based on the testimony of the expert. Naturally, the main challenge is determining whether the person in question is a legitimate expert or not. Is the authority qualified to make a judgment? Is the authority trustworthy and honest? Is the authority experienced?
  3. Argument by sign asserts that two or more things are so closely related that the presence or absence of one indicates the presence or absence of the other. This is in some ways a type of tightly linked cause and effect reasoning that has more certainty. Footprints are an indication that someone has walked by recently. The sun rising is a sign of the morning. Is the relationship strong? Is the relationship automatic? Is there an alternate cause? Is there an accumulation of signs pointing towards agreement? Are there contradictory signs present?
  4. If it looks like a duck, swims like a duck, and quacks like a duck, then it probably is a duck. The process of analogical inference involves noting the shared properties of two or more things, and from this basis inferring that they also share some further property. An analogical argument is an argument in which one concludes that two things are alike in a certain respect because they are alike in other respects. So we can say, Obama is like superman, because he takes the same stance. Analogies can range from the very literal, such as drawing an analogy between humans and the rats used to test a new medicine, to the metaphorical, such as the blood and money example given above. Are there significant points of similarity or difference? Are the points of similarity crucial to the comparison? Are the differences irrelevant to the comparison? Is the analogy strengthened by quantity, or is there just one comparison? Is the analogy realistic, or is it hypothetical or fantastic?