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Chapter 13: Categorical Propositions. Categorical Syllogisms (p. 141) Review of deductive arguments –Form –Valid/Invalid –Soundness Categorical syllogisms.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 13: Categorical Propositions. Categorical Syllogisms (p. 141) Review of deductive arguments –Form –Valid/Invalid –Soundness Categorical syllogisms."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 13: Categorical Propositions

2 Categorical Syllogisms (p. 141) Review of deductive arguments –Form –Valid/Invalid –Soundness Categorical syllogisms concern relations among classes. They were first discussed by Aristotle (384-322 BCE)

3 Categorical Propositions (pp. 142-144) Categorical Propositions state relations among classes of objects. Quantity –Universal –Particular –Singular Quality –Affirmative –Negative

4 Categorical Propositions (pp. 142-144) Four forms of categorical propositions –Universal Affirmative (A): All dogs are mammals. –Universal Negative (E): No cats are dogs. –Particular Affirmative (I): Some dogs are collies. –Particular Negative (O): Some dogs are not schnauzers.

5 Categorical Propositions (pp. 142-144) Standard form categorical propositions –It has a quantifier, which is either ‘all’, ‘no’, or ‘some’. –It has a subject term, which is immediately to the right of the quantifier. –It has a form of the verb ‘to be’, which is immediately to the right of the subject term. –It has a predicate term, which is immediately to the right of the verb.


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