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Introduction to Logic
Irving M. Copi Carl Cohen
Kenneth McMahon
Fourteenth Edition
Pearson Education Limited
Edinburgh Gate
Harlow
Essex CM20 2JE
England and Associated Companies throughout the world
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© Pearson Education Limited 2014
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issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency Ltd, Saffron House, 6–10 Kirby Street, London EC1N 8TS.
All trademarks used herein are the property of their respective owners. The use of any trademark
in this text does not vest in the author or publisher any trademark ownership rights in such
trademarks, nor does the use of such trademarks imply any affiliation with or endorsement of this
book by such owners.
ISBN 10: 1-292-02482-8
ISBN 13: 978-1-292-02482-0
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Printed in the United States of America
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Table of Contents
1. Basic Logical Concepts
Irving M. Copi/Carl Cohen/Kenneth McMahon
1
2. Analyzing Arguments
Irving M. Copi/Carl Cohen/Kenneth McMahon
35
3. Language and Definitions
Irving M. Copi/Carl Cohen/Kenneth McMahon
67
4. Fallacies
Irving M. Copi/Carl Cohen/Kenneth McMahon
109
5. Categorical Propositions
Irving M. Copi/Carl Cohen/Kenneth McMahon
167
6. Categorical Syllogisms
Irving M. Copi/Carl Cohen/Kenneth McMahon
211
7. Syllogisms in Ordinary Language
Irving M. Copi/Carl Cohen/Kenneth McMahon
255
8. Symbolic Logic
Irving M. Copi/Carl Cohen/Kenneth McMahon
305
9. Methods of Deduction
Irving M. Copi/Carl Cohen/Kenneth McMahon
365
10. Quantification Theory
Irving M. Copi/Carl Cohen/Kenneth McMahon
433
11. Analogical Reasoning
Irving M. Copi/Carl Cohen/Kenneth McMahon
485
12. Causal Reasoning
Irving M. Copi/Carl Cohen/Kenneth McMahon
513
13. Science and Hypothesis
Irving M. Copi/Carl Cohen/Kenneth McMahon
559
I
14. Probability
II
Irving M. Copi/Carl Cohen/Kenneth McMahon
587
A Very Brief History of Logic
Irving M. Copi/Carl Cohen/Kenneth McMahon
615
Glossary
Irving M. Copi/Carl Cohen/Kenneth McMahon
617
Index
631
Basic Logical Concepts
From Chapter 1 of Introduction to Logic, Fourteenth Edition. Irving M. Copi, Carl Cohen, Kenneth McMahon.
Copyright © 2011 by Pearson Education, Inc. Published by Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.
This asset is
intentionally omitted
from this text. It may
be accessed at
www.mcescher.com.
(Waterfall by
M.C. Escher)
Basic Logical Concepts
1
What Logic Is
2
Propositions and Arguments
3
Recognizing Arguments
4
Arguments and Explanations
5
Deductive and Inductive Arguments
6
Validity and Truth
1
What Logic Is
Logic is the study of the methods and principles used to distinguish correct from
incorrect reasoning.
When we reason about any matter, we produce arguments to support our
conclusions. Our arguments include reasons that we think justify our beliefs.
However, not all reasons are good reasons. Therefore we may always ask, when
we confront an argument: Does the conclusion reached follow from the premises
assumed? To answer this question there are objective criteria; in the study of
logic we seek to discover and apply those criteria.
Reasoning is not the only way in which people support assertions they
make or accept. They may appeal to authority or to emotion, which can be very
persuasive, or they may rely, without reflection, simply on habits. However,
when someone wants to make judgments that can be completely relied upon,
their only solid foundation will be correct reasoning. Using the methods and
techniques of logic—one can distinguish reliably between sound and faulty
reasoning.
Logic
The study of the
methods and principles
used to distinguish
correct from incorrect
reasoning.
Proposition
A statement; what is
typically asserted using
a declarative sentence,
and hence always either
true or false—although
its truth or falsity may be
unknown.
2
2
Propositions and Arguments
We begin by examining more closely the most fundamental concepts in the study
of logic, concepts presupposed in the paragraphs just above. In reasoning we
construct and evaluate arguments; arguments are built with propositions. Although these concepts are apparently simple, they require careful analysis.
A. Propositions
Propositions are the building blocks of our reasoning. A proposition asserts that
something is the case or it asserts that something is not. We may affirm a proposition, or deny it—but every proposition either asserts what really is the case, or
it asserts something that is not. Therefore every proposition is either true or false.
Basic Logical Concepts
Biography
Aristotle
O
f all the great philosophers and logicians, ancient and modern, none is
greater than Aristotle (384–322 BCE), whose works and influence largely ruled the world of intellect for two millennia. He was often referred
to as “The Philosopher”; his authority (even when he was mistaken!) was
rarely questioned.
Born in Macedonia, in the city of Stagira, where his father was physician to the king, he was viewed from birth as a member of the aristocracy,
and was a friend of the king’s son, Philip. When Philip
became king of Macedonia, he summoned Aristotle, who
had for many years been studying in Athens at Plato’s
school, The Academy, to return to Macedonia as tutor to
his son Alexander (who later would be known as Alexander the Great). As he advanced on his subsequent conquests in Asia, Alexander remained in contact with his
respected teacher, sending back, at Aristotle’s request,
specimens and artifacts that contributed to the early
growth of the sciences.
Aristotle—one of the trio, with Plato and Socrates,
who largely founded Western philosophy—had a truly
encyclopedic mind. He investigated, contributed to,
wrote about, and taught virtually all subjects on which
some knowledge had been accumulated at his time: the
natural sciences (biology, zoology, embryology, anatomy,
astronomy, meteorology, physics, and optics); the arts
(poetry, music, theater, and rhetoric); government and
politics; psychology and education; economics; ethics;
metaphysics—and of course logic, of which he alone was the systematic
founder. His treatises on logic, later combined into one great work entitled
The Organon (“The Instrument”), constitute the earliest formal study of our
subject. The penetration and coherence of his logical analyses, and the comprehensiveness and general accuracy of his scientific studies, justify his acknowledged status as one of the finest thinkers ever to have graced our
planet.
At the age of 49 Aristotle returned to Athens and established his own
highly influential school, the Lyceum, where he taught for twelve years. He
died of natural causes in 322 BCE. In his will, he asked to be buried next to his
wife, Pythias.
In logic Aristotle grasped the overriding necessity of determining the rules
of correct reasoning. He explained validity and characterized the four fundamental types of categorical propositions and their relations. In the Prior
© Bettmann/CORBIS
All Rights Reserved
3
Basic Logical Concepts
Analytics, one of the six books of The Organon, he developed a sophisticated
theoretical account of categorical syllogisms, an account that long dominated
the realm of deductive logic and that remains today an effective tool of sound
reasoning.
It is said of Aristotle that he was probably the last person to know everything there was to be known in his own time. 쐍
There are many propositions about whose truth we are uncertain. “There is
life on some other planet in our galaxy,” for example, is a proposition that, so far
as we now know, may be true or may be false. Its “truth value” is unknown, but
this proposition, like every proposition, must be either true or false.
A question asserts nothing, and therefore it is not a proposition. “Do you
know how to play chess?” is indeed a sentence, but that sentence makes no claim
about the world. Neither is a command a proposition (“Come quickly!”), nor is
an exclamation a proposition (“Oh my gosh!”). Questions, commands, and exclamations—unlike propositions—are neither true nor false.
When we assert some proposition, we do so using a sentence in some language. However, the proposition we assert is not identical to that sentence.
This is evident because two different sentences, consisting of different words
differently arranged, may have the same meaning and may be used to assert
the very same proposition. For example, “Leslie won the election” and “The
election was won by Leslie” are plainly two different sentences that make the
same assertion.
Sentences are always parts of some language, but propositions are not tied to
English or to any given language. The four sentences
Statement
A proposition; what is
typically asserted by a
declarative sentence,
but not the sentence
itself. Every statement
must be either true or
false, although the truth
or falsity of a given
statement may be
unknown.
4
It is raining.
Está lloviendo.
Il pleut.
Es regnet.
(English)
(Spanish)
(French)
(German)
are in different languages, but they have a single meaning: all four, using different
words, may be uttered to assert the very same proposition. Proposition is the term
we use to refer to what it is that declarative sentences are typically used to assert.
The term statement is not an exact synonym of proposition, but it is often used
in logic in much the same sense. Some logicians prefer statement to proposition,
although the latter has been more commonly used in the history of logic. Other
logicians eschew both terms as metaphysical, using only the term sentence.
Basic Logical Concepts
However, the concept of a proposition is seen by many as making a useful distinction between a sentence and what the sentence asserts..
The very same sentence can be used to make very different statements (or to
assert very different propositions), depending on the context in which it is expressed. For example, the sentence, “The largest state in the United States was
once an independent republic,” once expressed a true statement or proposition
(about Texas), but if asserted today would express a false statement or proposition
(about Alaska). The same words assert different propositions at different times.
Propositions may be simple, like those used in the preceding illustrations, but
they may also be compound, containing other propositions within themselves.
Consider the following proposition, from a recent account of the exploitation of
the Amazon Basin in Brazil:
The Amazon Basin produces roughly 20 percent of the Earth’s oxygen, creates much
of its own rainfall, and harbors many unknown species.1
This sentence simultaneously asserts three propositions, concerning what
the Amazon Basin produces and what it creates and what it harbors. The passage
thus constitutes a conjunctive proposition. Asserting a conjunctive proposition is
equivalent to asserting each of its component propositions separately.
Some compound propositions do not assert the truth of their components. In
disjunctive (or alternative) propositions, no one of the components is asserted.
Abraham Lincoln (in a message to Congress in December 1861) said, “Circuit
courts are useful, or they are not useful.” This disjunctive proposition is plainly
true, but either one of its components might be false.
Other compound propositions that do not assert their components are
hypothetical (or conditional) propositions. The eighteenth-century freethinker,
Voltaire, said, “If God did not exist, it would be necessary to invent him.” Here,
again, neither of the two components is asserted. The proposition “God does not
exist,” is not asserted, nor is the proposition, “it is necessary to invent him.” Only
the “if–then” proposition is asserted by the hypothetical or conditional statement, and that compound statement might be true even if both of its components
were false.
In logic, the internal structure of propositions is important. To evaluate an argument we need a full understanding of the propositions that appear in that argument. Propositions of many different kinds will be analyzed in this chapter.
B. Arguments
With propositions as building blocks, we construct arguments. In any argument
we affirm one proposition on the basis of some other propositions. In doing this,
an inference is drawn. Inference is a process that may tie together a cluster of
propositions. Some inferences are warranted (or correct); others are not. The logician analyzes these clusters, examining the propositions with which the process
begins and with which it ends, as well as the relations among these propositions.
Inference
A process by which one
proposition is arrived at
and affirmed on the
basis of some other
proposition or
propositions.
5
Basic Logical Concepts
Argument
Any group of
propositions of which
one is claimed to follow
from the others, which
are regarded as
providing support or
grounds for the truth of
that one.
Conclusion
In any argument, the
proposition to which the
other propositions in the
argument are claimed to
give support, or for
which they are given as
reasons.
Premises
In an argument, the
propositions upon which
inference is based; the
propositions that are
claimed to provide
grounds or reasons for
the conclusion.
6
Such a cluster of propositions constitutes an argument. Arguments are the chief
concern of logic.
Argument is a technical term in logic. It need not involve disagreement, or
controversy. In logic, argument refers strictly to any group of propositions of
which one is claimed to follow from the others, which are regarded as providing
support for the truth of that one. For every possible inference there is a corresponding argument.
In writing or in speech, a passage will often contain several related propositions and yet contain no argument. An argument is not merely a collection of
propositions; it is a cluster with a structure that captures or exhibits some inference. We describe this structure with the terms conclusion and premise. The
conclusion of an argument is the proposition that is affirmed on the basis of the
other propositions of the argument. Those other propositions, which are affirmed (or assumed) as providing support for the conclusion, are the premises of
the argument.
We will encounter a vast range of arguments in this text—arguments of
many different kinds, on many different topics. We will analyze arguments in
politics, in ethics, in sports, in religion, in science, in law, and in everyday life.
Those who defend these arguments, or who attack them, are usually aiming to
establish the truth (or the falsehood) of the conclusions drawn. As logicians,
however, our interest is in the arguments as such. As agents or as citizens we
may be deeply concerned about the truth or falsity of the conclusions drawn.
However, as logicians we put those interests aside. Our concerns will be chiefly
two. First, we will be concerned about the form of an argument under consideration, to determine if that argument is of a kind that is likely to yield a warranted
conclusion. Second, we will be concerned about the quality of the argument, to
determine whether it does in fact yield a warranted conclusion.
Arguments vary greatly in the degree of their complexity. Some are very simple. Other arguments, as we will see, are quite intricate, sometimes because of
the structure or formulation of the propositions they contain, sometimes because
of the relations among the premises, and sometimes because of the relations between premises and conclusion.
The simplest kind of argument consists of one premise and a conclusion that
is claimed to follow from it. Each may be stated in a separate sentence, as in the
following argument that appears on a sticker affixed to biology textbooks in the
state of Alabama:
No one was present when life first appeared on earth. Therefore any statement about
life’s origins should be considered as theory, not fact.
Both premise and conclusion may be stated within the same sentence, as in
this argument arising out of recent advances in the science of human genetics:
Since it turns out that all humans are descended from a small number of African ancestors in our recent evolutionary past, believing in profound differences between the
races is as ridiculous as believing in a flat earth.2
Basic Logical Concepts
Biography
Chrysippus
O
f all the logicians of ancient times, Aristotle and Chrysippus stand
out as the two greatest. The enormous influence of Aristotle, who
first systematized logic and was its principal authority for two
thousand years, has already been recognized. Born a century later,
Chrysippus (c. 279–c. 206 BCE) developed a conceptual scheme
whose influence has only more recently been appreciated.
The logic of Aristotle was one of classes. In the Aristotelian
argument “All men are mortal; Greeks are men; therefore Greeks
are mortal,” the fundamental elements are the categories, or
terms (“men,” “mortal things,” and “Greeks”). In contrast, the
logic of Chrysippus was one built of propositions and the connections between them (e.g., “If it is now day, it is now light. It is
now day. Therefore it is now light.”). This simple argument form
(now called modus ponens) and many other fundamental argument forms, Chrysippus analyzed and classified. His logical insights were creative and profound.
Born in Asia Minor, in Soli, Chrysippus studied the philosophy of the Stoics —most famous among them Zeno and Cleanthes—and eventually became head of the Stoic school in Athens.
In that capacity he taught the need to control one’s emotions, which he
thought to be disorders or diseases. He urged the patient acceptance of the
outcomes of a fate one cannot control, and the recognition that the one God
(of which the traditional Greek gods are but aspects) is the universe itself.
But it is as a logician that his influence has been greatest. He grasped, as
Aristotle did not, the central role of the proposition—“that which is, in itself, capable of being denied or affirmed.” From this base he developed the first coherent
system of propositional logic. 쐍
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The order in which premises and conclusion appear can also vary, but it is
not critical in determining the quality of the argument. It is common for the conclusion of an argument to precede the statement of its premise or premises. On the
day Babe Ruth hit his 700th home run (13 July 1934), the following argument appeared in The New York Times:
A record that promises to endure for all time was attained on Navin Field today when
Babe Ruth smashed his seven-hundredth home run in a lifetime career. It promises to
live, first because few players in history have enjoyed the longevity on the diamond of
the immortal Bambino, and, second, because only two other players in the history of
baseball have hit more than 300 home runs.
7
Basic Logical Concepts
This is an example of an argument whose two premises, each numbered, appear after the conclusion is stated. It is also an example of a very plausible argument whose conclusion is false, given that Hank Aaron hit his 700th home run on
21 July 1973, thirty-nine years later.
Even when premise and conclusion are united in one sentence, the conclusion of the argument may come first. The English utilitarian philosopher, Jeremy
Bentham, presented this crisp argument in his Principles of Legislation (1802):
Every law is an evil, for every law is an in ...
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