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Introduction to Logic and Critical Thinking,9780155430648
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Introduction to Logic and Critical Thinking

by Merrilee H. Salmon
Edition:
3rd
ISBN13:

9780155430648

ISBN10:
0155430645
Format:
Paperback
Pub. Date:
11/25/1994
Publisher(s):
Wadsworth Publishing
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Table of Contents

Introduction to Arguments
1(44)
Introduction
2(9)
Exercise Set 1.1
5(6)
Arguments
11(4)
Recognizing Arguments
15(8)
Exercise Set 1.2
18(5)
Extended Arguments
23(2)
Exercise Set 1.3
24(1)
Reconstructing Arguments
25(12)
Incompletely Stated Arguments
25(5)
Exercise Set 1.4
30(2)
Contextual Clues for Reconstructing Arguments
32(2)
Exercise Set 1.5
34(3)
Review
37(8)
Exercise Set 1.6
39(6)
Paying Special Attention to the Language of Arguments
45(23)
Introduction
46(1)
Ambiguity
46(4)
Exercise Set 2.1
49(1)
Vagueness
50(2)
Exercise Set 2.2
51(1)
Definition
52(12)
Ostensive Definition
52(1)
Verbal Extensional Definition
52(1)
Intensional Definition
53(1)
Definitions that Show How a Word Is Commonly Used
53(1)
Exercise Set 2.3
54(1)
Definitions that Introduce a New Word into the Language
54(2)
Definitions that Reduce Vagueness
56(1)
Exercise Set 2.4
57(1)
Definitions for Theoretical Purposes
57(1)
Definitions Designed to Transfer Emotive Force
58(2)
Exercise Set 2.5
60(1)
Syntactic Definitions and Implicit Definition
60(1)
Operational Definitions
61(3)
Exercise Set 2.7
64(1)
Review
64(4)
Exercise Set 2.8
65(3)
Deductive Arguments, Inductive Arguments, Fallacies
68(29)
Introduction
69(1)
Deductive Arguments
70(10)
Exercise Set 3.1
78(2)
Inductive Arguments
80(7)
Exercise Set 3.2
85(2)
Fallacies
87(3)
Exercise Set 3.3
89(1)
Review
90(7)
Exercise Set 3.4
91(6)
A Closer Look at Inductive Arguments
97(53)
Introduction
98(1)
Statistical Syllogisms
99(18)
Form of Statistical Syllogisms
100(1)
Standards for the Strength of Statistical Syllogisms
100(2)
Exercise Set 4.1
102(1)
The Fallacy of Incomplete Evidence
103(1)
Exercise Set 4.2
104(1)
Special Types of Statistical Syllogism
105(1)
Arguments from Authority
105(2)
Exercise Set 4.3
107(1)
Arguments Against the Person (Argumentum Ad Hominem)
108(3)
Arguments from Consensus
111(2)
Missing Premisses in Statistical Syllogisms
113(1)
An Incorrect Form of Inductive Argument
113(2)
Exercise Set 4.4
115(2)
Arguments from Analogy
117(12)
Form of Arguments from Analogy
118(1)
Standards for the Strength of Analogical Arguments
119(1)
Fallacies Associated with Analogical Arguments
120(1)
Analogy in Archaeology and in Legal and Moral Reasoning
121(2)
Exercise Set 4.5
123(4)
Analogy and the Slippery Slope
127(2)
Exercise Set 4.6
129(1)
Arguments Based on Samples
129(11)
Preliminary Account of the Form of Arguments Based on Samples
131(1)
Standards for the Strength of Inductive Generalizations
131(3)
Fallacies Associated with Inductive Generalizations
134(2)
The Revised Form of Inductive Generalization
136(2)
Exercise Set 4.7
138(2)
Extended Inductive Arguments
140(1)
Pro and Con Arguments
140(2)
Review
142(8)
Exercise Set 4.8
144(6)
Causal Arguments
150(45)
Introduction
151(1)
Mill's Method for Establishing Causal Claims
151(16)
The Method of Agreement
152(2)
Exercise Set 5.1
154(1)
The Method of Difference
155(1)
Exercise Set 5.2
156(1)
The Joint Method of Agreement and Difference
156(3)
The Method of Concomitant Variation
159(2)
The Method of Residues
161(2)
Exercise Set 5.3
163(4)
Controlled Experiments
167(6)
Exercise Set 5.4
171(2)
Different Uses of ``Cause''
173(5)
Exercise Set 5.5
177(1)
Hume's Analysis of Causation
178(3)
Causal Fallacies
181(8)
Confusing Coincidental Relationships with Causes (Post Hoc)
182(1)
Ignoring a Common Cause
183(1)
Confusing Cause and Effect
184(2)
Genetic Fallacy: Reasons and Causes
186(1)
Confusing the Harm or Benefits that Result from Holding a Belief with Evidence for It
187(2)
Review
189(6)
Exercise Set 5.6
191(4)
Probabilities and Inductive Logic
195(33)
Introduction
196(4)
The Rules of Probability
200(8)
Exercise Set 6.1
207(1)
Decision Theory: Using Probabilities to Plan a Course of Action
208(14)
Decisions Under Risk
209(4)
Decisions Under Certainty
213(1)
Decisions Under Uncertainty
214(3)
The Prisoner's Dilemma
217(2)
The Petersburg Paradox
219(2)
The Law of Averages and the Gamblers' Fallacy
221(1)
Review
222(6)
Exercise Set 6.2
224(4)
Deductive Reasoning: Conditional Arguments
228(21)
Introduction
229(1)
Properties of Deductive Arguments: Validity and the Importance of Logical Form
229(3)
Conditional Sentences
232(7)
The Structure of Conditionals
233(2)
Exercise Set 7.1
235(1)
The Truth of Conditionals
235(3)
Exercise Set 7.2
238(1)
Conditional Arguments
239(4)
Affirming the Antecedent
239(1)
Exercise Set 7.3
240(1)
Denying the Consequent
240(2)
Exercise Set 7.4
242(1)
Unstated Premisses in Conditional Arguments
242(1)
Fallacies Associated with Conditional Arguments
243(2)
Fallacious (Invalid) Forms of Argument
243(1)
Invalid and Fallacious Arguments
244(1)
Review
245(4)
Exercise Set 7.5
246(3)
Confirmation of Hypotheses
249(36)
Hypotheses
250(1)
The Hypothetico-Deductive Method
251(2)
Complexities in the Hypothetico-Deductive Method
253(11)
Auxiliary Hypotheses
253(2)
Alternative Hypotheses
255(2)
Form of Inductive Arguments of Confirmation
257(2)
Confirming a Causal Hypothesis
259(2)
Exercise Set 8-1
261(3)
Incremental Confirmation and ``Absolute'' Confirmation
264(2)
Exercise Set 8-2
266(1)
Disconfirmation
266(8)
Crucial Tests
268(1)
Disconfirming a Causal Hypothesis
269(2)
Exercise Set 8-3
271(3)
Bayesian Confirmation
274(4)
Bayes's Theorem
274(2)
Exercise Set 8-4
276(2)
Using Bayes's Theorem to Test Hypotheses
278(3)
Exercise Set 8-5
280(1)
Review
281(4)
Exercise Set 8-6
283(2)
Arguments in Which Validity Depends on Connections Among Sentences
285(39)
Introduction
286(8)
Hypothetical Syllogisms
287(1)
Dilemmas
288(2)
False Dilemmas
290(1)
Disjunctive Syllogisms
291(2)
Exercise Set 9.1
293(1)
Symbolizing Connectives
294(2)
Symbolizing English Sentences
296(4)
Exercise Set 9.2
299(1)
Determining the Truth Values of Compound Sentence Forms
300(2)
Exercise Set 9.3
301(1)
Determining the Validity or Invalidity of Argument Forms
302(8)
Exercise Set 9.4
306(4)
Tautologies, Self-Contradictions, and Contingent Sentences
310(3)
Exercise Set 9.5
312(1)
Logic and Computers: Application of Truth-Functional Logic
313(8)
Representation of Numbers
314(1)
Decimal System
314(1)
Binary System
314(1)
Binary Addition
315(1)
Constructing an Adder
316(1)
Exercise Set 9.6
316(3)
Disjunctive Normal Forms
319(1)
Exercise Set 9.7
320(1)
Review
321(3)
Categorical Syllogisms
324(43)
Introduction
325(1)
Categorical Sentences
326(8)
Relationships among Categorical Sentences the Traditional Square of Opposition
327(3)
Existential Import and the Modern Square of Opposition
330(2)
Exercise Set 10.1
332(2)
Translating English Sentences into Standard Categorical Forms
334(6)
A Sentences
334(2)
E Sentences
336(1)
I Sentences
337(1)
O Sentences
338(1)
Exercise Set 10.2
339(1)
Testing for Validity with Venn Diagrams
340(6)
Exercise Set 10.3
345(1)
Distribution of Terms
346(2)
Exercise Set 10.4
348(1)
Rules for Testing the Validity of Syllogisms
348(7)
Three Rules for Valid Syllogisms
349(3)
Exercise Set 10.5
352(1)
Examples of Using the Rules to Test Validity
353(1)
Exercise Set 10.6
354(1)
Reducing the Number of Terms in Syllogisms
355(3)
Exercise Set 10.7
357(1)
Reconstructing Ordinary-Language Arguments as Syllogisms
358(1)
Quasi-Syllogism and Sorites
359(3)
Quasi-Syllogisms
359(1)
Sorites
360(1)
Exercise Set 10.8
361(1)
Review
362(5)
Exercise Set 10.9
364(3)
Arguments in Which Validity Depends on Relationships
367(19)
Introduction
368(1)
Examples of Relational Arguments
368(1)
Important Properties of Relationships
369(2)
Exercise Set 11.1
371(1)
Using Quantifiers to Express Relationships
371(10)
Symbolizing the Universal Quantifier
372(2)
Symbolizing the Existential Quantifier
374(1)
Exercise Set 11.2
375(1)
Symbolizing Relational Sentences
375(2)
Exercise Set 11.3
377(1)
Multiple Quantifiers
378(1)
Exercise Set 11.4
379(1)
The Fallacy of Every and All
379(2)
Symbolizing Arguments
381(2)
Review
383(3)
Exercise Set 11.5
384(2)
APPENDIX ONE PROOF METHOD FOR TRUTH-FUNCTIONAL LOGIC 386(12)
I. Introduction
387(1)
II. The Proof Method
388(5)
Exercise Set A-1
392(1)
III. Justifying the Rules of Inference
393(5)
Exercise Set A-2
396(2)
APPENDIX TWO INDEX OF FALLACIES 398(4)
Bibliography 402(4)
Answers to Odd-Numbered Exercises 406(55)
Index 461


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