Practice Test Three Fall True or False True = A, False = B

Similar documents
Practice Test Three Spring True or False True = A, False = B

LOGICAL FALLACIES/ERRORS OF ARGUMENT

What is an argument? PHIL 110. Is this an argument? Is this an argument? What about this? And what about this?

MPS 17 The Structure of Persuasion Logos: reasoning, reasons, good reasons not necessarily about formal logic

Chapter 1. What is Philosophy? Thinking Philosophically About Life

CHAPTER THREE Philosophical Argument

Lemon Bay High School AP Language and Composition ENC 1102 Mr. Hertz

Logic Practice Test 1

Fallacies in logic. Hasty Generalization. Post Hoc (Faulty cause) Slippery Slope

Reading Comprehension Fallacies in Reading

Christ-Centered Critical Thinking. Lesson 7: Logical Fallacies

Arguments. 1. using good premises (ones you have good reason to believe are both true and relevant to the issue at hand),

This fallacy gets its name from the Latin phrase "post hoc, ergo propter hoc," which translates as "after this, therefore because of this.

Philosophical Arguments

SHORT ANSWER. Write the word or phrase that best completes each statement or answers the question.

Unit 4. Reason as a way of knowing. Tuesday, March 4, 14

1. To arrive at the truth we have to reason correctly. 2. Logic is the study of correct reasoning. B. DEDUCTIVE AND INDUCTIVE ARGUMENTS

Study Guides. Chapter 1 - Basic Training

FROM INQUIRY TO ACADEMIC WRITING CHAPTER 8 FROM ETHOS TO LOGOS: APPEALING TO YOUR READERS

Lecture 4 Good and Bad Arguments Jim Pryor Some Good and Bad Forms of Arguments

Handout 1: Arguments -- the basics because, since, given that, for because Given that Since for Because

In view of the fact that IN CLASS LOGIC EXERCISES

2/21/2014. FOUR WAYS OF KNOWING (Justifiable True Belief) 1. Sensory input; 2. Authoritative knowledge; 3. Logic and reason; 4. Faith and intuition

LOGIC. Inductive Reasoning. Wednesday, April 20, 16

Logical Fallacies. Continuing our foray into the world of Argument. Courtesy of:

CRITICAL THINKING. Formal v Informal Fallacies

Unit. Categorical Syllogism. What is a syllogism? Types of Syllogism

A R G U M E N T S I N A C T I O N

Logical Fallacies RHETORICAL APPEALS

MCQ IN TRADITIONAL LOGIC. 1. Logic is the science of A) Thought. B) Beauty. C) Mind. D) Goodness

Full file at

Logic Appendix: More detailed instruction in deductive logic

Relevance. Premises are relevant to the conclusion when the truth of the premises provide some evidence that the conclusion is true

The Field of Logical Reasoning: (& The back 40 of Bad Arguments)

Fallacies are deceptive errors of thinking.

Answers to Practice Problems 7.3

A man lives on the twelfth floor of an apartment building. Every morning he takes the elevator down to the lobby and leaves the building.

Common Logical Fallacies

This online lecture was prepared by Dr. Laura Umphrey in the School of Communication at Northern Arizona University

What is a logical argument? What is deductive reasoning? Fundamentals of Academic Writing

Fallacies. What this handout is about. Arguments. What are fallacies?

Bellwork Friday November 18th

Hello, AP Scholars! Welcome to AP English Language and Composition.

Logic. A Primer with Addendum

Fallacies. Definition: The premises of an argument do support a particular conclusion but not the conclusion that the arguer actually draws.

Everything s an Argument Guided Study Notes, Chapters Chapter 16: What Counts in Evidence

Persuasive Argument Relies heavily on appeals to emotion, to the subconscious, even to bias and prejudice. Characterized by figurative language,

Philosophy 12 Study Guide #4 Ch. 2, Sections IV.iii VI

Fallacies Keep in Your Binder

The Argumentative Essay

PHI 1700: Global Ethics

Lecture 3 Arguments Jim Pryor What is an Argument? Jim Pryor Vocabulary Describing Arguments

Those who doubt the writing is from the autistic children themselves, lack compassion, and should stay the hell out of our lives!

Logical Fallacies. Continuing our foray into the world of Argument. Courtesy of:

Please visit our website for other great titles:

The Roman empire ended, the Mongol empire ended, the Persian empire ended, the British empire ended, all empires end, and none lasts forever.

Video: How does understanding whether or not an argument is inductive or deductive help me?

TEACHING ASSISTANTS PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM SCHOOL OF SCIENCES AND ENGINEERING Spring 2015

PLEASE DO NOT WRITE ON THIS QUIZ

Logical (formal) fallacies

Argumentation. 2. What should we consider when making (or testing) an argument?

LOGIC LECTURE #3: DEDUCTION AND INDUCTION. Source: A Concise Introduction to Logic, 11 th Ed. (Patrick Hurley, 2012)

Appendix: The Logic Behind the Inferential Test

Questions for Critically Reading an Argument

Inductive Logic. Induction is the process of drawing a general conclusion from incomplete evidence.

LOGICAL FALLACIES. Common Mistakes in Weak Arguments. (these are bad don t use them ) AP English Language & Composition

Varsity LD: It s All About Clash. 1:15 pm 2:30 pm TUESDAY, June 26

Recall. Validity: If the premises are true the conclusion must be true. Soundness. Valid; and. Premises are true

Unit 4. Reason as a way of knowing

Chapter 5: Ways of knowing Reason (p. 111)

Tutorial A03: Patterns of Valid Arguments By: Jonathan Chan

FALLACIES IN GENERAL IRRELEVANCE AMBIGUITY UNWARRANTED ASSUMPTIONS. Informal Fallacies. PHIL UA-70: Logic. February 17 19, 2015

How Thinking Goes Wrong Twenty-five Fallacies That Lead Us to Believe Weird Things

An Altogether Too Brief Introduction to Logic for Students of Rhetoric

Purdue OWL Logic in Argumentative Writing

Philosophy 1100: Ethics

APPENDIX A CRITICAL THINKING MISTAKES

TOK FALLACIES Group 1: Clark Godwin, Kaleigh Rudge, David Fitzgerald, Maren Dorne, Thanh Pham

ARGUMENTS. Arguments. arguments

HANDBOOK (New or substantially modified material appears in boxes.)

PHILOSOPHY 102 INTRODUCTION TO LOGIC PRACTICE EXAM 1. W# Section (10 or 11) 4. T F The statements that compose a disjunction are called conjuncts.

Argument and Persuasion. Stating Opinions and Proposals

Logic Book Part 1! by Skylar Ruloff!

3.2: FAULTY REASONING AND PROPAGANDA. Ms. Hargen

There are two common forms of deductively valid conditional argument: modus ponens and modus tollens.

PHIL2642 CRITICAL THINKING USYD NOTES PART 1: LECTURE NOTES

I. Claim: a concise summary, stated or implied, of an argument s main idea, or point. Many arguments will present multiple claims.

PHI 1500: Major Issues in Philosophy

I. Subject-verb agreement (393-4), parallelism (402), and mixed construction (418-19).

14.6 Speaking Ethically and Avoiding Fallacies L E A R N I N G O B JE C T I V E S

II Plenary discussion of Expertise and the Global Warming debate.

Logic and Nosich s Elements

Chapter 1. Introduction. 1.1 Deductive and Plausible Reasoning Strong Syllogism

USING LOGOS WISELY. AP Language and Composition

Debate Vocabulary 203 terms by mdhamilton25

Directions: For Problems 1-10, determine whether the given statement is either True (A) or False (B).

I. What is an Argument?

PHI Introduction Lecture 4. An Overview of the Two Branches of Logic

1 Chapter 6 (Part 2): Assessing Truth Claims

Logical Fallacies. Define the following logical fallacies and provide an example for each.

Transcription:

Practice Test Three Fall 2015 True or False True = A, False = B 1. The inclusive "or" means "A or B or both A and B." 2. The conclusion contains both the major term and the middle term. 3. "If, then" statements are also called conditional statements. 4. When the conclusion of a deductive argument is true, the argument must be sound. 5. The A statment and the O statement differ in quality and quantity. 6. To think that what holds true of a group automatically holds true of the individuals in the group is known as the fallacy of composition. 7. Ad hominem is Latin for to the man. 8. The term "hypothetical claim" describes the conclusion of a hypothesis. 9. The I and O statements can be false at the same time. 10. The figure in a syllogism is determined by the middle term. 11. Even if the premises of an inductive argument are known to be true, it is always possible that the conclusion is false. 12. If O is false, then E is false. 13. An easy way to determine that a person's solution is the correct one is to see that their motives are pure. For instance, if a person really cares about education, then their solution for education is most likely correct. 14. The following is a categorical proposition: "A dog is a mammal, if it has hair." 15. A conclusion is a statement of support. 16. The education system tends to make propaganda more effective. 17. It s easy to spot a chain argument because they always have more than one if, or a variant like when. 18. When we misrepresent the arguments of others and then attack the misrepresentation rather than the actual position, we commit the straw man fallacy. Page 1, v3

19. An invalid deductive argument could have all true statements in it. 20. The quality of the statement, "All S are P" is universal. 21. Modus Ponens and Modus Tollens are always sound. 22. One way to be certain that an opinion poll sample is reliable is to conduct a self-selecting sample. 23. Two competing hypotheses cannot both be confirmed. 24. You can safely assume that, if a person has a vested interest in an issue, any position that he or she takes on that subject must be false or weakly supported. 25. A sound argument is a valid deductive argument with true premisses. 26. In negative propositions, the predicate is always taken universally. 27. The subject-term in the O statement is distributed. 28. The surest way to know that one event (A) is the cause of another (B), is to observe whether event A occurs directly before event B. 29. Modus ponens is Latin for "affirming the consequent." 30. All sound arguments are valid. 31. A valid syllogism cannot have two negative premises. 32. In a valid deductive argument the conclusion could be true or false. 33. Assuming a conditional claim is true, if the sufficient condition is present, then the necessary condition, necessarily follows. 34. Two statements are sucontrary if they differ from each other in quality and are both particular. 35. The terms hypothesis, theory, and law all mean the same thing in terms of logical structure. 36. The quality of the statement, "Some S are not P" is affirmative. 37. Propaganda generally works because the target audience wants it to work. Multiple Choice Select the best available answer. Page 2, v3

38. "If you touch that drink, then you will want another and other, until finally you become an alcoholic." This is an example of... A. Anecdotal evidence B. Ambiguity C. Appeal to ignorance D. False dilemma E. Slippery slope 39. The Associated Press and three of the nation's biggest newspapers are under pressure to stop referring to climate change "skeptics" in stories, and instead label those who question the science of global warming as "deniers." Those promoting the use of this term often make comparisons between global warming skeptics and Holocaust deniers. The use of the term "denier" best illustrates... A. Negative association B. Sneer words C. Ad populum D. Hasty generalization E. Both A and B 40. What is the mood of the following categorical syllogism? No horned animal is a predator All moose are horned animals Therefore, No moose is a predator A. AAE B. EAE C. AEE D. AEO E. none of the above 41. "New Ginger Snap costs less." The main problem is: A. The ad doesn't tell how much the soda costs. B. The ad doesn't tell how much other sodas cost. C. The ad doesn't tell what the soda costs less than. D. The ad is fine as it is. 42. "In 1990, there were 100 unemployed people in Boone County. In 2000, there were 250. That's an increase of 150 percent in just ten years. Unemployment in this country is becoming an epidemic!" This is an example of... A. Appeal to pity B. Causal fallacy C. Division D. Faulty comparison E. Slippery slope Page 3, v3

43. Two propositions are if they cannot both be true and they cannot both be false. In other words, the statements have opposite truth values. A. contraries B. contradictories C. subcontraries D. subalterns 44. Actual question in a poll done by the L.A. Times: "Do you want the continued decline of California schools or do you support an increase in taxes?" A. False Dilemma B. Loaded Question C. Straw Man D. Ad Hominen E. Both A and B 45. The circumstance where all the media affect a change in the culture s world view. This is called... A. total propaganda. B. vertical propaganda C. hypothesis testing. D. deductive reasoning. 46. If there is rain, the game will be canceled. But the game will not be canceled. So, there isn't any rain. A. Valid B. Invalid 47. At any moment, there are people who are wealthy, others who are poor, and everything in between. But over time, people shift through economic strata. Poor people rarely stay poor. Rich people often lose their fortunes and have to build them up all over again. Most people end up better off financially than when they started out in life. Politicians often talk about the rich and the poor in static terms. It is assumed that the rich were always rich. Furthermore, they assume that the poor became poor because they were exploited by the rich. Arguing in this fashion commits what error? A. Ad hominem B. Fallacy of four terms C. Oversimplification D. Two wrongs make a right Page 4, v3

48. "Support Governor Brown or your children will receive a poor education." This is an example of... A. Ad hominem B. Ad populum C. Circular reasoning (begging the question) D. Scare Tactics E. Straw man F. None of the above 49. Identify the euphemism in the following statement: Though there remain a good number of underpriveleged families in our nation, most people fare better than they would in most other countries. A. people in the country B. most other countries C. state of the economy D. underpriveleged families 50. A hacker broke into the computers at the University of East Anglia's Climate Research Unit and released 61 megabytes of confidential files onto the internet. This information revealed a world-wide conspiracy to perpetuate a global warming hoax. When Senator Barbara Boxer was asked about this serious revelation, she responded that the information was gained illegally and there should be an investigation to bring the hacker to justice. This is an example of... A. Ambiguity B. Appeal to authority C. Begging the question D. Hasty generalization E. Red herring 51. Which of the following utilize a high modality? A. The Republican senators might not do what the president wants. B. There's no doubt that Republicans control Congress. C. It is likely that a Democrat will become the next president. D. It is possible that the president will put pressure on Congress. E. all of the above 52. In terms of logical structure, a hypothesis can be... A. proven true or proven false B. proven true, or but not proven false. C. never be proven true, but can be proven false. D. never be proven true, nor proven false. Page 5, v3

53. A car salesman who starts by showing the customer the worst cars on the lot, then systematically moving to better and better cars. This exemplifies: A. Appeal to motives B. Card stacking C. Ad hominem D. Testimonial E. Questionable causal relationship 54. "I am writing because I understand that I must maintain a grade-point average of 3.0. However, unlike my classmates, whose companies provide financial support, I am paying for my own education. If I am not allowed to continue, I will lose my entire investment to date. This is a substantial sum of money. It will be a great loss not only for me but also for my family and especially my children who will need to enter college shortly." This is an example of: A. Begging the question B. Appeal to pity C. Deductive reasoning D. Ad hominem E. Ad populum 55. Perhaps the most common argument used to support global warming is that there is a consensus among scientists. This commits which fallacy? A. Ad populum B. Ad hominem C. Faulty analogy D. Equivocation E. Faulty comparison 56. All logic problems are difficult. Some logic problems are difficult. A. Subalterns B. Not subalterns 57. Joe Morgan, announcing a Giants-Marlins game and commenting on the Marlins pitcher: "He's been a little erratic, which explains why he hasn't been consistent." This is an example of... A. Appeal to authority B. Analogy C. Begging the question D. Innuendo E. Straw man Page 6, v3

58. I've always reckoned that looking at the new moon over your left shoulder is one of the carelessest and foolishest things a body can do. Old Hank Bunker done it once, and bragged about it; and in less than two years he got drunk and fell off of the shot tower, and spread himself out so that he was just a kind of a layer, as you may say; and they slid him edgeways between two barn doors for a coffin, and buried him so, so they say, but I didn't see it. Pap told me. But anyway it all come of looking at the moon that way, like a fool. (Mark Twain, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn) A. Ambiguity B. Anecdotal evidence C. Plain folks D. Post hoc, ergo propter hoc 59. Actual quote by Howard Dean, "One of the most disturbing things about the Republican Party of the last couple of decades is that they just don't believe in science any more." This is an example of: A. A sound argument B. Appeal to authority C. Appeal to popularity D. Straw man 60. I know God exists, because the Bible says He does. And I know the Bible is true because God wrote it. This is an example of... A. an excellent argument that proves that God exists. B. begging the question. C. quotation out of context. D. an example of something that is a matter of opinion. E. both a) and c). 61. What is the figure of the following categorical syllogism? All of Shakespeare's dramas are in blank verse Some great plays are in blank verse Therefore, Some great plays are Shakespeare's dramas A. first figure B. second figure C. third figure D. fourth figure Page 7, v3

62. "Men can't talk about abortion, because they can't get pregnant." This is an example of... A. Appeal to tradition B. Ad hominem C. Begging the question D. Appeal to authority E. A perfectly reasonable argument. 63. All banks contain money. All rivers have banks. Therefore, all rivers contain money. The fallacy in this argument is: A. Missing the point B. False cause C. Equivocation D. Complex question 64. ABC News suggested that we shouldn't listen to what Al Gore has to say about global warming because his electric bill is twenty times that of the average American ($30,000). This is an example of... A. Ad hominem B. Begging the question C. Faulty comparison D. Questionable cause E. Two wrongs make a right 65. p or q ~p q A. Valid B. Invalid 66. When a representative of President Clinton was asked about the affair with Monica Lewinsky, they responded, "Well, a number of the senators participating in the impeachment trial also had affairs." This is an example of... A. Appeal to pity B. Appeal to popularity C. False dilemma D. Plain folks E. Two wrongs make a right Page 8, v3

67. We may have good reason to doubt the credibility of a source if... A. the source is not a genuine expert or authority on the topic he or she is discussing. B. the issue is not one that can be settled by expert opinion. C. both a and b D. none of the above Page 9, v3

Answer Key for Test COA_Logic_Practice_Fina#2909E8F, 12/4/15 No. in Q-Bank No. on Test Correct Answer 2 83 1 T 20.1 144 2 F 12 5 3 T 20.1 110 4 It's false, since nothing is said about the truth of the premises or the validity of the argument. 20.1 120 5 True 3 79 6 F 2 4 7 T 2 217 8 F 20.1 124 9 False 20.1 135 10 T 2 204 11 T 20.1 95 12 True 2 277 13 F 20.1 54 14 F 12 6 15 F 2 288 16 T 2 10 17 T 2 127 18 T 20.1 115 19 True, the conclusion could just be true by coincidence. For example, "The sky is blue and grass is green, so you're working this problem now. 20.1 50 20 F 12 3 21 F 2 157 22 F 2 287 23 F 2 126 24 F 20.1 106 25 True 20.1 55 26 T 20.1 57 27 T 2 141 28 F 2 219 29 F 12 1 30 T 20.1 140 31 T 20.1 114 32 True, the truth of the conclusion would depend of the truth value of the premisses. 2 14 33 T 20.1 125 34 True 2 286 35 T 20.1 59 36 F 2 2 37 T 15 6 38 Slippery slope 2 291 39 Both A and B 20.1 72 40 EAE 15 18 41 C 15 15 42 Faulty comparison. "Did somebody change the subject?" 20.1 79 43 Contradictories 2 282 44 False dilemma The press reported that 63% of Californians favor increasing taxes. This is the question that got that response. Page 1, v3

Answer Key for Test COA_Logic_Practice_Fina#2909E8F, 12/4/15 No. in Q-Bank No. on Test Correct Answer 2 17 45 Total propagada 2 150 46 Valid 20.1 181 47 Oversimplification 15 1 48 False dilemma 2 113 49 Underpriveleged families instead of poor. 15 10 50 Red herring 2 19 51 There's no doubt that Republicans control Congress. 2 285 52 Never be proven true, but can be proven false. 2 71 53 Dard stacking 2 59 54 Dppeal to pity 2 293 55 Ad populum 20.1 136 56 A 15 7 57 Begging the question 15 16 58 Post hoc, ergo propter hoc 2 290 59 Straw man 2 29 60 Begging the question 20.1 66 61 Second figure 2 292 62 Ed hominem 20.1 156 63 Equivocation 15 9 64 Ad hominem 2 147 65 Valid 15 8 66 Two wrongs make a right 2 145 67 Both a and b Page 2, v3