Session 1 Flashcards

(13 cards)

1
Q

What is the concept of argument?

A

A statement that presents a claim supported by premises

Arguments consist of premises and conclusions, often indicated by specific markers.

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2
Q

Name the premise indicators used in arguments.

A
  • since
  • because
  • after all
  • given that
  • let us assume that…
  • first/second/third

These indicators help identify the premises in an argument.

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3
Q

Name the conclusion indicators used in arguments.

A
  • hence
  • so
  • therefore
  • thus
  • accordingly
  • consequently
  • it follows that

These indicators signal the conclusion of an argument.

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4
Q

What are the four sentence moods?

A
  • Declarative
  • Imperative
  • Interrogative
  • Exclamatory

Each mood serves a different communicative purpose.

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5
Q

What does the declarative mood communicate?

A

That something is or isn’t the case

Example: Barry won the 50m freestyle. Only these sentences can be false.

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6
Q

What does the imperative mood communicate?

A

A command

Example: Go and win that race Barry.

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7
Q

What does the interrogative mood communicate?

A

A question or a request

Example: Did Barry win the 50m freestyle?

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8
Q

What does the exclamatory mood communicate?

A

Emotions or attitudes

Example: Well done, Barry!

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9
Q

What is a deductive argument?

A

An argument where the conclusion is supposed to follow from its premises with necessity

Example: If Lizzie wants to study at FS, she must attend an FS assessment centre.

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10
Q

What is an inductive argument?

A

An argument where the conclusion is supported but not guaranteed by its premises

Example: Lizzie studies at FS; over 90% of FS students are less than 35 years old; therefore, Lizzie is less than 35 years old.

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11
Q

What is validity in the context of arguments?

A

A deductive argument is valid iff the conclusion can’t be false while the premises are all true

Validity relates to the logical structure of the argument.

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12
Q

What does logically impossible mean?

A

A situation is logically possible iff it is coherent, conceivable, or non-contradictory

This concept helps in evaluating the plausibility of scenarios.

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13
Q

What is the difference between validity and soundness?

A

Validity concerns logical structure; soundness involves actual truth and falsity

A sound argument is both valid and has true premises.

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