Exercise: Identifying Premises and Conclusions
Identify the premises and conclusion in the following arguments. Also determine whether the argument is valid and whether it contains hidden assumptions.
Exercises:
1. "Since all birds have feathers and penguins are birds, penguins must have feathers."
2. "The streets are wet, so it has rained."
3. "If one has a good education, one gets a well-paid job. Maria has a well-paid job, so she must have a good education."
4. "Either we raise taxes or we cut social benefits. We cannot cut social benefits. Therefore, we must raise taxes."
5. "All politicians are corrupt. Hans is a politician. Consequently, Hans is corrupt."
Solutions:
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Premises: "All birds have feathers" and "Penguins are birds" Conclusion: "Penguins have feathers" Validity: Valid (Modus Ponens) Hidden assumptions: None essential
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Premise: "The streets are wet" Conclusion: "It has rained" Validity: Invalid (there are other possible causes for wet streets) Hidden assumptions: "Rain is the only possible cause for wet streets"
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Premises: "If one has a good education, one gets a well-paid job" and "Maria has a well-paid job" Conclusion: "Maria has a good education" Validity: Invalid (affirming the consequent fallacy) Hidden assumptions: "A good education is the only way to get a well-paid job"
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Premises: "Either we raise taxes or we cut social benefits" and "We cannot cut social benefits" Conclusion: "We must raise taxes" Validity: Valid (Disjunctive Syllogism) Hidden assumptions: "There are only these two options"
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Premises: "All politicians are corrupt" and "Hans is a politician" Conclusion: "Hans is corrupt" Validity: Valid (categorical syllogism) Hidden assumptions: The truth of the first premise is questionable