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LogicandEvidence Scientific argument
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Logic Reasoning –Deductive –Inductive
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Deductive Reasoning 2+ factual premises followed by 1 necessary conclusion –“Syllogism”: 2 premises, 1 conclusion –Categorical –Conditional –Disjunctive Validity vs. truth Types of arguments:
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Inductive Reasoning Making a generalization based on several observed facts Inductive fallacies –Sample size too small –Unrepresentative sampling –“Slothful induction”
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Evidence A valid deductive argument results in a true conclusion only if the premises are true. An inductive argument is only meaningful if reliable particular cases are presented.
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Scientific argument LogicEvidence
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Evaluating claims Foundation of core knowledge that is unlikely to change Often, we have to depend on premises that are based on a previous finding(s) Watch for hidden assumptions
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References / further reading Derry, G.N. 1999. Thinking straight: evidence, reason and critical evaluation. In: What science is and how it works, pp. 89-106. Princeton Univ. Press. Downes, S. 1998. Stephen’s guide to the logical fallacies. http://www.datanation.com/fallacies/index.htm
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