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Syllogism

A syllogism (Greek: συλλογισμός, syllogismos, 'conclusion, inference') is a kind of logical argument that applies deductive reasoning to arrive at a conclusion based on two propositions that are asserted or assumed to be true.

"Socrates" at the Louvre

In its earliest form (defined by Aristotle in his 350 BC book Prior Analytics), a syllogism arises when two true premises (propositions or statements) validly imply a conclusion, or the main point that the argument aims to get across.[1] For example, knowing that all men are mortal (major premise) and that Socrates is a man (minor premise), we may validly conclude that Socrates is mortal. Syllogistic arguments are usually represented in a three-line form:

All men are mortal.
Socrates is a man.
Therefore, Socrates is mortal.[2]

In antiquity, two rival syllogistic theories existed: Aristotelian syllogism and Stoic syllogism.[3] From the Middle Ages onwards, categorical syllogism and syllogism were usually used interchangeably. This article is concerned only with this historical use. The syllogism was at the core of historical deductive reasoning, whereby facts are determined by combining existing statements, in contrast to inductive reasoning in which facts are determined by repeated observations.

Within some academic contexts, syllogism has been superseded by first-order predicate logic following the work of Gottlob Frege, in particular his Begriffsschrift (Concept Script; 1879). Syllogism, being a method of valid logical reasoning, will always be useful in most circumstances and for general-audience introductions to logic and clear-thinking.[4][5]

Early history

In antiquity, two rival syllogistic theories existed: Aristotelian syllogism and Stoic syllogism.[3]

Aristotle

Aristotle defines the syllogism as "a discourse in which certain (specific) things having been supposed, something different from the things supposed results of necessity because these things are so."[6] Despite this very general definition, in Prior Analytics, Aristotle limits himself to categorical syllogisms that consist of three categorical propositions, including categorical modal syllogisms.[7]

The use of syllogisms as a tool for understanding can be dated back to the logical reasoning discussions of Aristotle. Before the mid-12th century, medieval logicians were only familiar with a portion of Aristotle's works, including such titles as Categories and On Interpretation, works that contributed heavily to the prevailing Old Logic, or logica vetus. The onset of a New Logic, or logica nova, arose alongside the reappearance of Prior Analytics, the work in which Aristotle developed his theory of the syllogism.

Prior Analytics, upon rediscovery, was instantly regarded by logicians as "a closed and complete body of doctrine," leaving very little for thinkers of the day to debate and reorganize. Aristotle's theory on the syllogism for assertoric sentences was considered especially remarkable, with only small systematic changes occurring to the concept over time. This theory of the syllogism would not enter the context of the more comprehensive logic of consequence until logic began to be reworked in general in the mid-14th century by the likes of John Buridan.

Aristotle's Prior Analytics did not, however, incorporate such a comprehensive theory on the modal syllogism—a syllogism that has at least one modalized premise, that is, a premise containing the modal words 'necessarily', 'possibly', or 'contingently'. Aristotle's terminology, in this aspect of his theory, was deemed vague and in many cases unclear, even contradicting some of his statements from On Interpretation. His original assertions on this specific component of the theory were left up to a considerable amount of conversation, resulting in a wide array of solutions put forth by commentators of the day. The system for modal syllogisms laid forth by Aristotle would ultimately be deemed unfit for practical use and would be replaced by new distinctions and new theories altogether.

Medieval syllogism

Boethius

Boethius (c. 475–526) contributed an effort to make the ancient Aristotelian logic more accessible. While his Latin translation of Prior Analytics went primarily unused before the 12th century, his textbooks on the categorical syllogism were central to expanding the syllogistic discussion. Rather than in any additions that he personally made to the field, Boethius's logical legacy lies in his effective transmission of prior theories to later logicians, as well as his clear and primarily accurate presentations of Aristotle's contributions.

Peter Abelard

Another of medieval logic's first contributors from the Latin West, Peter Abelard (1079–1142), gave his own thorough evaluation of the syllogism concept and accompanying theory in the Dialectica—a discussion of logic based on Boethius's commentaries and monographs. His perspective on syllogisms can be found in other works as well, such as Logica Ingredientibus. With the help of Abelard's distinction between de dicto modal sentences and de re modal sentences, medieval logicians began to shape a more coherent concept of Aristotle's modal syllogism model.

Jean Buridan

The French philosopher Jean Buridan (c. 1300 – 1361), whom some consider the foremost logician of the later Middle Ages, contributed two significant works: Treatise on Consequence and Summulae de Dialectica, in which he discussed the concept of the syllogism, its components and distinctions, and ways to use the tool to expand its logical capability. For 200 years after Buridan's discussions, little was said about syllogistic logic. Historians of logic have assessed that the primary changes in the post-Middle Age era were changes in respect to the public's awareness of original sources, a lessening of appreciation for the logic's sophistication and complexity, and an increase in logical ignorance—so that logicians of the early 20th century came to view the whole system as ridiculous.[8]

Modern history

The Aristotelian syllogism dominated Western philosophical thought for many centuries. Syllogism itself is about drawing valid conclusions from assumptions (axioms), rather than about verifying the assumptions. However, people over time focused on the logic aspect, forgetting the importance of verifying the assumptions.

In the 17th century, Francis Bacon emphasized that experimental verification of axioms must be carried out rigorously, and cannot take syllogism itself as the best way to draw conclusions in nature.[9] Bacon proposed a more inductive approach to the observation of nature, which involves experimentation and leads to discovering and building on axioms to create a more general conclusion.[9] Yet, a full method of drawing conclusions in nature is not the scope of logic or syllogism, and the inductive method was covered in Aristotle's subsequent treatise, the Posterior Analytics.

In the 19th century, modifications to syllogism were incorporated to deal with disjunctive ("A or B") and conditional ("if A then B") statements. Immanuel Kant famously claimed, in Logic (1800), that logic was the one completed science, and that Aristotelian logic more or less included everything about logic that there was to know. (This work is not necessarily representative of Kant's mature philosophy, which is often regarded as an innovation to logic itself.) Although there were alternative systems of logic elsewhere, such as Avicennian logic or Indian logic, Kant's opinion stood unchallenged in the West until 1879, when Gottlob Frege published his Begriffsschrift (Concept Script). This introduced a calculus, a method of representing categorical statements (and statements that are not provided for in syllogism as well) by the use of quantifiers and variables.

A noteworthy exception is the logic developed in Bernard Bolzano's work Wissenschaftslehre (Theory of Science, 1837), the principles of which were applied as a direct critique of Kant, in the posthumously published work New Anti-Kant (1850). The work of Bolzano had been largely overlooked until the late 20th century, among other reasons, because of the intellectual environment at the time in Bohemia, which was then part of the Austrian Empire. In the last 20 years, Bolzano's work has resurfaced and become subject of both translation and contemporary study.

This led to the rapid development of sentential logic and first-order predicate logic, subsuming syllogistic reasoning, which was, therefore, after 2000 years, suddenly considered obsolete by many.[original research?] The Aristotelian system is explicated in modern fora of academia primarily in introductory material and historical study.

One notable exception to this modern relegation is the continued application of Aristotelian logic by officials of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, and the Apostolic Tribunal of the Roman Rota, which still requires that any arguments crafted by Advocates be presented in syllogistic format.

Boole's acceptance of Aristotle

George Boole's unwavering acceptance of Aristotle's logic is emphasized by the historian of logic John Corcoran in an accessible introduction to Laws of Thought.[10][11] Corcoran also wrote a point-by-point comparison of Prior Analytics and Laws of Thought.[12] According to Corcoran, Boole fully accepted and endorsed Aristotle's logic. Boole's goals were "to go under, over, and beyond" Aristotle's logic by:[12]

  1. providing it with mathematical foundations involving equations;
  2. extending the class of problems it could treat, as solving equations was added to assessing validity; and
  3. expanding the range of applications it could handle, such as expanding propositions of only two terms to those having arbitrarily many.

More specifically, Boole agreed with what Aristotle said; Boole's 'disagreements', if they might be called that, concern what Aristotle did not say. First, in the realm of foundations, Boole reduced Aristotle's four propositional forms to one form, the form of equations, which by itself was a revolutionary idea. Second, in the realm of logic's problems, Boole's addition of equation solving to logic—another revolutionary idea—involved Boole's doctrine that Aristotle's rules of inference (the "perfect syllogisms") must be supplemented by rules for equation solving. Third, in the realm of applications, Boole's system could handle multi-term propositions and arguments, whereas Aristotle could handle only two-termed subject-predicate propositions and arguments. For example, Aristotle's system could not deduce: "No quadrangle that is a square is a rectangle that is a rhombus" from "No square that is a quadrangle is a rhombus that is a rectangle" or from "No rhombus that is a rectangle is a square that is a quadrangle."

Basic structure

A categorical syllogism consists of three parts:

  1. Major premise
  2. Minor premise
  3. Conclusion

Each part is a categorical proposition, and each categorical proposition contains two categorical terms.[13] In Aristotle, each of the premises is in the form "All A are B," "Some A are B", "No A are B" or "Some A are not B", where "A" is one term and "B" is another:

More modern logicians allow some variation. Each of the premises has one term in common with the conclusion: in a major premise, this is the major term (i.e., the predicate of the conclusion); in a minor premise, this is the minor term (i.e., the subject of the conclusion). For example:

Major premise: All humans are mortal.
Minor premise: All Greeks are humans.
Conclusion: All Greeks are mortal.

Each of the three distinct terms represents a category. From the example above, humans, mortal, and Greeks: mortal is the major term, and Greeks the minor term. The premises also have one term in common with each other, which is known as the middle term; in this example, humans. Both of the premises are universal, as is the conclusion.

Major premise: All mortals die.
Minor premise: All men are mortals.
Conclusion: All men die.

Here, the major term is die, the minor term is men, and the middle term is mortals. Again, both premises are universal, hence so is the conclusion.

Polysyllogism

A polysyllogism, or a sorites, is a form of argument in which a series of incomplete syllogisms is so arranged that the predicate of each premise forms the subject of the next until the subject of the first is joined with the predicate of the last in the conclusion. For example, one might argue that all lions are big cats, all big cats are predators, and all predators are carnivores. To conclude that therefore all lions are carnivores is to construct a sorites argument.

Types

 
Relationships between the four types of propositions in the square of opposition

(Black areas are empty,
red areas are nonempty.)

There are infinitely many possible syllogisms, but only 256 logically distinct types and only 24 valid types (enumerated below). A syllogism takes the form (note: M – Middle, S – subject, P – predicate.):

Major premise: All M are P.
Minor premise: All S are M.
Conclusion: All S are P.

The premises and conclusion of a syllogism can be any of four types, which are labeled by letters[14] as follows. The meaning of the letters is given by the table:

code quantifier subject copula predicate type example
A All S are P universal affirmative All humans are mortal.
E No S are P universal negative No humans are perfect.
I Some S are P particular affirmative Some humans are healthy.
O Some S are not P particular negative Some humans are not clever.

In Prior Analytics, Aristotle uses mostly the letters A, B, and C (Greek letters alpha, beta, and gamma) as term place holders, rather than giving concrete examples. It is traditional to use is rather than are as the copula, hence All A is B rather than All As are Bs. It is traditional and convenient practice to use a, e, i, o as infix operators so the categorical statements can be written succinctly. The following table shows the longer form, the succinct shorthand, and equivalent expressions in predicate logic:

Form Shorthand Predicate logic
All A is B AaB    or   
No A is B AeB    or   
Some A is B AiB  
Some A is not B AoB  

The convention here is that the letter S is the subject of the conclusion, P is the predicate of the conclusion, and M is the middle term. The major premise links M with P and the minor premise links M with S. However, the middle term can be either the subject or the predicate of each premise where it appears. The differing positions of the major, minor, and middle terms gives rise to another classification of syllogisms known as the figure. Given that in each case the conclusion is S-P, the four figures are:

Figure 1 Figure 2 Figure 3 Figure 4
Major premise M–P P–M M–P P–M
Minor premise S–M S–M M–S M–S

(Note, however, that, following Aristotle's treatment of the figures, some logicians—e.g., Peter Abelard and Jean Buridan—reject the fourth figure as a figure distinct from the first.)

Putting it all together, there are 256 possible types of syllogisms (or 512 if the order of the major and minor premises is changed, though this makes no difference logically). Each premise and the conclusion can be of type A, E, I or O, and the syllogism can be any of the four figures. A syllogism can be described briefly by giving the letters for the premises and conclusion followed by the number for the figure. For example, the syllogism BARBARA below is AAA-1, or "A-A-A in the first figure".

The vast majority of the 256 possible forms of syllogism are invalid (the conclusion does not follow logically from the premises). The table below shows the valid forms. Even some of these are sometimes considered to commit the existential fallacy, meaning they are invalid if they mention an empty category. These controversial patterns are marked in italics. All but four of the patterns in italics (felapton, darapti, fesapo and bamalip) are weakened moods, i.e. it is possible to draw a stronger conclusion from the premises.

Figure 1 Figure 2 Figure 3 Figure 4
Barbara Cesare Datisi Calemes
Celarent Camestres Disamis Dimatis
Darii Festino Ferison Fresison
Ferio Baroco Bocardo Calemos
Barbari Cesaro Felapton Fesapo
Celaront Camestros Darapti Bamalip
 

Fig. 1, treble clef. "A syllogism's letters can be best represented in music— take E, for example." -Marilyn Damord[citation needed]

The letters A, E, I, and O have been used since the medieval Schools to form mnemonic names for the forms as follows: 'Barbara' stands for AAA, 'Celarent' for EAE, etc.

Next to each premise and conclusion is a shorthand description of the sentence. So in AAI-3, the premise "All squares are rectangles" becomes "MaP"; the symbols mean that the first term ("square") is the middle term, the second term ("rectangle") is the predicate of the conclusion, and the relationship between the two terms is labeled "a" (All M are P).

The following table shows all syllogisms that are essentially different. The similar syllogisms share the same premises, just written in a different way. For example "Some pets are kittens" (SiM in Darii) could also be written as "Some kittens are pets" (MiS in Datisi).

In the Venn diagrams, the black areas indicate no elements, and the red areas indicate at least one element. In the predicate logic expressions, a horizontal bar over an expression means to negate ("logical not") the result of that expression.

It is also possible to use graphs (consisting of vertices and edges) to evaluate syllogisms.[15]

Examples

   
M: men
S: Greeks      P: mortal


Barbara (AAA-1)

   All men are mortal. (MaP)
   All Greeks are men. (SaM)
All Greeks are mortal. (SaP)


   
M: reptile
S: snake      P: fur


Celarent (EAE-1)

Similar: Cesare (EAE-2)

   No reptile has fur. (MeP)
   All snakes are reptiles. (SaM)
No snake has fur. (SeP)


   
M: rabbit
S: pet      P: fur


Darii (AII-1)

Similar: Datisi (AII-3)

   All rabbits have fur. (MaP)
   Some pets are rabbits. (SiM)
Some pets have fur. (SiP)


   
M: homework
S: reading      P: fun


Ferio (EIO-1)

Similar: Festino (EIO-2), Ferison (EIO-3), Fresison (EIO-4)

   No homework is fun. (MeP)
   Some reading is homework. (SiM)
Some reading is not fun. (SoP)


   
M: mammal
S: pet      P: cat


Baroco (AOO-2)

   All cats are mammals. (PaM)
   Some pets are not mammals. (SoM)
Some pets are not cats. (SoP)


   
M: cat
S: mammal      P: pet


Bocardo (OAO-3)

   Some cats are not pets. (MoP)
   All cats are mammals. (MaS)
Some mammals are not pets. (SoP)



   
M: man
S: Greek      P: mortal


Barbari (AAI-1)

   All men are mortal. (MaP)
   All Greeks are men. (SaM)
Some Greeks are mortal. (SiP)


   
M: reptile
S: snake      P: fur


Celaront (EAO-1)

Similar: Cesaro (EAO-2)

   No reptiles have fur. (MeP)
   All snakes are reptiles. (SaM)
Some snakes have no fur. (SoP)


   
M: hooves
S: human      P: horse


Camestros (AEO-2)

Similar: Calemos (AEO-4)

   All horses have hooves. (PaM)
   No humans have hooves. (SeM)
All humans are not horses. (SoP)


   
M: flower
S: plant      P: animal


Felapton (EAO-3)

Similar: Fesapo (EAO-4)

   No flowers are animals. (MeP)
   All flowers are plants. (MaS)
Some plants are not animals. (SoP)


   
M: square
S: rhomb      P: rectangle


Darapti (AAI-3)

   All squares are rectangles. (MaP)
   All squares are rhombuses. (MaS)
Some rhombuses are rectangles. (SiP)


Table of all syllogisms

This table shows all 24 valid syllogisms, represented by Venn diagrams. Columns indicate similarity, and are grouped by combinations of premises. Borders correspond to conclusions. Those with an existential assumption are dashed.

figure A ∧ A A ∧ E A ∧ I A ∧ O E ∧ I
1
 
Barbara
 
Barbari
 
Celarent
 
Celaront
 
Darii
 
Ferio
2
 
Camestres
 
Camestros
 
Cesare
 
Cesaro
 
Baroco
 
Festino
3
 
Darapti
 
Felapton
 
Datisi
 
Disamis
 
Bocardo
 
Ferison
4
 
Bamalip
 
Calemes
 
Calemos
 
Fesapo
 
Dimatis
 
Fresison

Terms in syllogism

With Aristotle, we may distinguish singular terms, such as Socrates, and general terms, such as Greeks. Aristotle further distinguished types (a) and (b):

  1. terms that could be the subject of predication; and
  2. terms that could be predicated of others by the use of the copula ("is a").

Such a predication is known as a distributive, as opposed to non-distributive as in Greeks are numerous. It is clear that Aristotle's syllogism works only for distributive predication, since we cannot reason All Greeks are animals, animals are numerous, therefore all Greeks are numerous. In Aristotle's view singular terms were of type (a), and general terms of type (b). Thus, Men can be predicated of Socrates but Socrates cannot be predicated of anything. Therefore, for a term to be interchangeable—to be either in the subject or predicate position of a proposition in a syllogism—the terms must be general terms, or categorical terms as they came to be called. Consequently, the propositions of a syllogism should be categorical propositions (both terms general) and syllogisms that employ only categorical terms came to be called categorical syllogisms.

It is clear that nothing would prevent a singular term occurring in a syllogism—so long as it was always in the subject position—however, such a syllogism, even if valid, is not a categorical syllogism. An example is Socrates is a man, all men are mortal, therefore Socrates is mortal. Intuitively this is as valid as All Greeks are men, all men are mortal therefore all Greeks are mortals. To argue that its validity can be explained by the theory of syllogism would require that we show that Socrates is a man is the equivalent of a categorical proposition. It can be argued Socrates is a man is equivalent to All that are identical to Socrates are men, so our non-categorical syllogism can be justified by use of the equivalence above and then citing BARBARA.

Existential import

If a statement includes a term such that the statement is false if the term has no instances, then the statement is said to have existential import with respect to that term. It is ambiguous whether or not a universal statement of the form All A is B is to be considered as true, false, or even meaningless if there are no As. If it is considered as false in such cases, then the statement All A is B has existential import with respect to A.

It is claimed Aristotle's logic system does not cover cases where there are no instances. Aristotle's goal was to develop "a companion-logic for science. He relegates fictions, such as mermaids and unicorns, to the realms of poetry and literature. In his mind, they exist outside the ambit of science, which is why he leaves no room for such non-existent entities in his logic. This is a thoughtful choice, not an inadvertent omission. Technically, Aristotelian science is a search for definitions, where a definition is 'a phrase signifying a thing's essence.'... Because non-existent entities cannot be anything, they do not, in Aristotle's mind, possess an essence... This is why he leaves no place for fictional entities like goat-stags (or unicorns)." [16]


However, many logic systems developed since do consider the case where there may be no instances. Medieval logicians were aware of the problem of existential import and maintained that negative propositions do not carry existential import, and that positive propositions with subjects that do not supposit are false.

The following problems arise:

  1. (a) In natural language and normal use, which statements of the forms, All A is B, No A is B, Some A is B, and Some A is not B, have existential import and with respect to which terms?
  2. In the four forms of categorical statements used in syllogism, which statements of the form AaB, AeB, AiB and AoB have existential import and with respect to which terms?
  3. What existential imports must the forms AaB, AeB, AiB and AoB have for the square of opposition to be valid?
  4. What existential imports must the forms AaB, AeB, AiB and AoB have to preserve the validity of the traditionally valid forms of syllogisms?
  5. Are the existential imports required to satisfy (d) above such that the normal uses in natural languages of the forms All A is B, No A is B, Some A is B and Some A is not B are intuitively and fairly reflected by the categorical statements of forms AaB, AeB, AiB and AoB?

For example, if it is accepted that AiB is false if there are no As and AaB entails AiB, then AiB has existential import with respect to A, and so does AaB. Further, if it is accepted that AiB entails BiA, then AiB and AaB have existential import with respect to B as well. Similarly, if AoB is false if there are no As, and AeB entails AoB, and AeB entails BeA (which in turn entails BoA) then both AeB and AoB have existential import with respect to both A and B. It follows immediately that all universal categorical statements have existential import with respect to both terms. If AaB and AeB is a fair representation of the use of statements in normal natural language of All A is B and No A is B respectively, then the following example consequences arise:

"All flying horses are mythical" is false if there are no flying horses.
If "No men are fire-eating rabbits" is true, then "There are fire-eating rabbits" is true; and so on.

If it is ruled that no universal statement has existential import then the square of opposition fails in several respects (e.g. AaB does not entail AiB) and a number of syllogisms are no longer valid (e.g. BaC,AaB->AiC).

These problems and paradoxes arise in both natural language statements and statements in syllogism form because of ambiguity, in particular ambiguity with respect to All. If "Fred claims all his books were Pulitzer Prize winners", is Fred claiming that he wrote any books? If not, then is what he claims true? Suppose Jane says none of her friends are poor; is that true if she has no friends?

The first-order predicate calculus avoids such ambiguity by using formulae that carry no existential import with respect to universal statements. Existential claims must be explicitly stated. Thus, natural language statements—of the forms All A is B, No A is B, Some A is B, and Some A is not B—can be represented in first order predicate calculus in which any existential import with respect to terms A and/or B is either explicit or not made at all. Consequently, the four forms AaB, AeB, AiB, and AoB can be represented in first order predicate in every combination of existential import—so it can establish which construal, if any, preserves the square of opposition and the validity of the traditionally valid syllogism. Strawson claims such a construal is possible, but the results are such that, in his view, the answer to question (e) above is no.

Syllogistic fallacies

People often make mistakes when reasoning syllogistically.[17]

For instance, from the premises some A are B, some B are C, people tend to come to a definitive conclusion that therefore some A are C.[18][19] However, this does not follow according to the rules of classical logic. For instance, while some cats (A) are black things (B), and some black things (B) are televisions (C), it does not follow from the parameters that some cats (A) are televisions (C). This is because in the structure of the syllogism invoked (i.e. III-1) the middle term is not distributed in either the major premise or in the minor premise, a pattern called the "fallacy of the undistributed middle". Because of this, it can be hard to follow formal logic, and a closer eye is needed in order to ensure that an argument is, in fact, valid.[20]

Determining the validity of a syllogism involves determining the distribution of each term in each statement, meaning whether all members of that term are accounted for.

In simple syllogistic patterns, the fallacies of invalid patterns are:

Other types of syllogism

See also

References

  1. ^ Lundberg, Christian (2018). The Essential Guide to Rhetoric. Bedford/St.Martin's. p. 38.
  2. ^ John Stuart Mill, A System of Logic, Ratiocinative and Inductive, Being a Connected View of the Principles of Evidence, and the Methods of Scientific Investigation, 3rd ed., vol. 1, chap. 2 (London: John W. Parker, 1851), 190.
  3. ^ a b Frede, Michael. 1975. "Stoic vs. Peripatetic Syllogistic." Archive for the History of Philosophy 56:99–124.
  4. ^ Hurley, Patrick J. 2011. A Concise Introduction to Logic. Cengage Learning. ISBN 9780840034175
  5. ^ Zegarelli, Mark. 2010. Logic for Dummies. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 9781118053072.
  6. ^ Aristotle, Prior Analytics, 24b18–20
  7. ^ Bobzien, Susanne. [2006] 2020. "Ancient Logic." Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. § Aristotle.
  8. ^ Lagerlund, Henrik (2 February 2004). "Medieval Theories of the Syllogism". The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Edward N. Zalta. Retrieved 17 February 2014.
  9. ^ a b Bacon, Francis. [1620] 2001. . – via Constitution Society. Archived from the original on 13 April 2019.
  10. ^ Boole, George. [1854] 2003. The Laws of Thought, with an introduction by J. Corcoran. Buffalo: Prometheus Books.
  11. ^ van Evra, James. 2004. "'The Laws of Thought' by George Boole" (review). Philosophy in Review 24:167–69.
  12. ^ a b Corcoran, John. 2003. "Aristotle's 'Prior Analytics' and Boole's 'Laws of Thought'." History and Philosophy of Logic 24:261–88.
  13. ^ "Philosophical Dictionary: Caird-Catharsis". Philosophypages.com. 2002-08-08. Retrieved 2009-12-14.
  14. ^ According to Copi, p. 127: 'The letter names are presumed to come from the Latin words "AffIrmo" and "nEgO," which mean "I affirm" and "I deny," respectively; the first capitalized letter of each word is for universal, the second for particular'
  15. ^ "Syllogisms Made Easy". Archived from the original on 2021-12-11 – via www.youtube.com.
  16. ^ . Archived from the original on 2017-02-04. Retrieved 2017-03-07.
  17. ^ See, e.g., Evans, J. St. B. T (1989). Bias in human reasoning. London: LEA.
  18. ^ Khemlani, S., and P. N. Johnson-Laird. 2012. "Theories of the syllogism: A meta-analysis." Psychological Bulletin 138:427–57.
  19. ^ Chater, N., and M. Oaksford. 1999. "The Probability Heuristics Model of Syllogistic Reasoning." Cognitive Psychology 38:191–258.
  20. ^ Lundberg, Christian (2018). The Essential Guide to Rhetoric. Bedford/St. Martin's. p. 39.

Sources

External links

  • Smith, Robin. "Aristotle's Logic". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • Koutsoukou-Argyraki, Angeliki. Aristotle's Assertoric Syllogistic (Formal proof development in Isabelle/HOL, Archive of Formal Proofs)
  • Lagerlund, Henrik. "Medieval Theories of the Syllogism". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • Aristotle's Prior Analytics: the Theory of Categorical Syllogism an annotated bibliography on Aristotle's syllogistic
  • Fuzzy Syllogistic System
  • Development of Fuzzy Syllogistic Algorithms and Applications Distributed Reasoning Approaches
  • Comparison between the Aristotelian Syllogism and the Indian/Tibetan Syllogism
  • The Buddhist Philosophy of Universal Flux (Chapter XXIII – Members of a Syllogism (avayava))
  • Online Syllogistic Machine An interactive syllogistic machine for exploring all the fallacies, figures, terms, and modes of syllogisms.


syllogism, syllogism, greek, συλλογισμός, syllogismos, conclusion, inference, kind, logical, argument, that, applies, deductive, reasoning, arrive, conclusion, based, propositions, that, asserted, assumed, true, socrates, louvre, epagoge, redirects, here, genu. A syllogism Greek syllogismos syllogismos conclusion inference is a kind of logical argument that applies deductive reasoning to arrive at a conclusion based on two propositions that are asserted or assumed to be true Socrates at the Louvre Epagoge redirects here For the genus of moth see Epagoge genus Minor premise redirects here For the 2020 thriller film see Minor Premise film In its earliest form defined by Aristotle in his 350 BC book Prior Analytics a syllogism arises when two true premises propositions or statements validly imply a conclusion or the main point that the argument aims to get across 1 For example knowing that all men are mortal major premise and that Socrates is a man minor premise we may validly conclude that Socrates is mortal Syllogistic arguments are usually represented in a three line form All men are mortal Socrates is a man Therefore Socrates is mortal 2 In antiquity two rival syllogistic theories existed Aristotelian syllogism and Stoic syllogism 3 From the Middle Ages onwards categorical syllogism and syllogism were usually used interchangeably This article is concerned only with this historical use The syllogism was at the core of historical deductive reasoning whereby facts are determined by combining existing statements in contrast to inductive reasoning in which facts are determined by repeated observations Within some academic contexts syllogism has been superseded by first order predicate logic following the work of Gottlob Frege in particular his Begriffsschrift Concept Script 1879 Syllogism being a method of valid logical reasoning will always be useful in most circumstances and for general audience introductions to logic and clear thinking 4 5 Contents 1 Early history 1 1 Aristotle 1 2 Medieval syllogism 1 2 1 Boethius 1 2 2 Peter Abelard 1 2 3 Jean Buridan 2 Modern history 2 1 Boole s acceptance of Aristotle 3 Basic structure 3 1 Polysyllogism 4 Types 4 1 Examples 4 1 1 Barbara AAA 1 4 1 2 Celarent EAE 1 4 1 3 Darii AII 1 4 1 4 Ferio EIO 1 4 1 5 Baroco AOO 2 4 1 6 Bocardo OAO 3 4 1 7 Barbari AAI 1 4 1 8 Celaront EAO 1 4 1 9 Camestros AEO 2 4 1 10 Felapton EAO 3 4 1 11 Darapti AAI 3 4 2 Table of all syllogisms 5 Terms in syllogism 6 Existential import 7 Syllogistic fallacies 8 Other types of syllogism 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Sources 11 External linksEarly history EditMain article History of logic In antiquity two rival syllogistic theories existed Aristotelian syllogism and Stoic syllogism 3 Aristotle Edit Main article Term logic Aristotle defines the syllogism as a discourse in which certain specific things having been supposed something different from the things supposed results of necessity because these things are so 6 Despite this very general definition in Prior Analytics Aristotle limits himself to categorical syllogisms that consist of three categorical propositions including categorical modal syllogisms 7 The use of syllogisms as a tool for understanding can be dated back to the logical reasoning discussions of Aristotle Before the mid 12th century medieval logicians were only familiar with a portion of Aristotle s works including such titles as Categories and On Interpretation works that contributed heavily to the prevailing Old Logic or logica vetus The onset of a New Logic or logica nova arose alongside the reappearance of Prior Analytics the work in which Aristotle developed his theory of the syllogism Prior Analytics upon rediscovery was instantly regarded by logicians as a closed and complete body of doctrine leaving very little for thinkers of the day to debate and reorganize Aristotle s theory on the syllogism for assertoric sentences was considered especially remarkable with only small systematic changes occurring to the concept over time This theory of the syllogism would not enter the context of the more comprehensive logic of consequence until logic began to be reworked in general in the mid 14th century by the likes of John Buridan Aristotle s Prior Analytics did not however incorporate such a comprehensive theory on the modal syllogism a syllogism that has at least one modalized premise that is a premise containing the modal words necessarily possibly or contingently Aristotle s terminology in this aspect of his theory was deemed vague and in many cases unclear even contradicting some of his statements from On Interpretation His original assertions on this specific component of the theory were left up to a considerable amount of conversation resulting in a wide array of solutions put forth by commentators of the day The system for modal syllogisms laid forth by Aristotle would ultimately be deemed unfit for practical use and would be replaced by new distinctions and new theories altogether Medieval syllogism Edit Boethius Edit Boethius c 475 526 contributed an effort to make the ancient Aristotelian logic more accessible While his Latin translation of Prior Analytics went primarily unused before the 12th century his textbooks on the categorical syllogism were central to expanding the syllogistic discussion Rather than in any additions that he personally made to the field Boethius s logical legacy lies in his effective transmission of prior theories to later logicians as well as his clear and primarily accurate presentations of Aristotle s contributions Peter Abelard Edit Another of medieval logic s first contributors from the Latin West Peter Abelard 1079 1142 gave his own thorough evaluation of the syllogism concept and accompanying theory in the Dialectica a discussion of logic based on Boethius s commentaries and monographs His perspective on syllogisms can be found in other works as well such as Logica Ingredientibus With the help of Abelard s distinction between de dicto modal sentences and de re modal sentences medieval logicians began to shape a more coherent concept of Aristotle s modal syllogism model Jean Buridan Edit The French philosopher Jean Buridan c 1300 1361 whom some consider the foremost logician of the later Middle Ages contributed two significant works Treatise on Consequence and Summulae de Dialectica in which he discussed the concept of the syllogism its components and distinctions and ways to use the tool to expand its logical capability For 200 years after Buridan s discussions little was said about syllogistic logic Historians of logic have assessed that the primary changes in the post Middle Age era were changes in respect to the public s awareness of original sources a lessening of appreciation for the logic s sophistication and complexity and an increase in logical ignorance so that logicians of the early 20th century came to view the whole system as ridiculous 8 Modern history EditThe Aristotelian syllogism dominated Western philosophical thought for many centuries Syllogism itself is about drawing valid conclusions from assumptions axioms rather than about verifying the assumptions However people over time focused on the logic aspect forgetting the importance of verifying the assumptions In the 17th century Francis Bacon emphasized that experimental verification of axioms must be carried out rigorously and cannot take syllogism itself as the best way to draw conclusions in nature 9 Bacon proposed a more inductive approach to the observation of nature which involves experimentation and leads to discovering and building on axioms to create a more general conclusion 9 Yet a full method of drawing conclusions in nature is not the scope of logic or syllogism and the inductive method was covered in Aristotle s subsequent treatise the Posterior Analytics In the 19th century modifications to syllogism were incorporated to deal with disjunctive A or B and conditional if A then B statements Immanuel Kant famously claimed in Logic 1800 that logic was the one completed science and that Aristotelian logic more or less included everything about logic that there was to know This work is not necessarily representative of Kant s mature philosophy which is often regarded as an innovation to logic itself Although there were alternative systems of logic elsewhere such as Avicennian logic or Indian logic Kant s opinion stood unchallenged in the West until 1879 when Gottlob Frege published his Begriffsschrift Concept Script This introduced a calculus a method of representing categorical statements and statements that are not provided for in syllogism as well by the use of quantifiers and variables A noteworthy exception is the logic developed in Bernard Bolzano s work Wissenschaftslehre Theory of Science 1837 the principles of which were applied as a direct critique of Kant in the posthumously published work New Anti Kant 1850 The work of Bolzano had been largely overlooked until the late 20th century among other reasons because of the intellectual environment at the time in Bohemia which was then part of the Austrian Empire In the last 20 years Bolzano s work has resurfaced and become subject of both translation and contemporary study This led to the rapid development of sentential logic and first order predicate logic subsuming syllogistic reasoning which was therefore after 2000 years suddenly considered obsolete by many original research The Aristotelian system is explicated in modern fora of academia primarily in introductory material and historical study One notable exception to this modern relegation is the continued application of Aristotelian logic by officials of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith and the Apostolic Tribunal of the Roman Rota which still requires that any arguments crafted by Advocates be presented in syllogistic format Boole s acceptance of Aristotle Edit George Boole s unwavering acceptance of Aristotle s logic is emphasized by the historian of logic John Corcoran in an accessible introduction to Laws of Thought 10 11 Corcoran also wrote a point by point comparison of Prior Analytics and Laws of Thought 12 According to Corcoran Boole fully accepted and endorsed Aristotle s logic Boole s goals were to go under over and beyond Aristotle s logic by 12 providing it with mathematical foundations involving equations extending the class of problems it could treat as solving equations was added to assessing validity and expanding the range of applications it could handle such as expanding propositions of only two terms to those having arbitrarily many More specifically Boole agreed with what Aristotle said Boole s disagreements if they might be called that concern what Aristotle did not say First in the realm of foundations Boole reduced Aristotle s four propositional forms to one form the form of equations which by itself was a revolutionary idea Second in the realm of logic s problems Boole s addition of equation solving to logic another revolutionary idea involved Boole s doctrine that Aristotle s rules of inference the perfect syllogisms must be supplemented by rules for equation solving Third in the realm of applications Boole s system could handle multi term propositions and arguments whereas Aristotle could handle only two termed subject predicate propositions and arguments For example Aristotle s system could not deduce No quadrangle that is a square is a rectangle that is a rhombus from No square that is a quadrangle is a rhombus that is a rectangle or from No rhombus that is a rectangle is a square that is a quadrangle Basic structure EditA categorical syllogism consists of three parts Major premise Minor premise ConclusionEach part is a categorical proposition and each categorical proposition contains two categorical terms 13 In Aristotle each of the premises is in the form All A are B Some A are B No A are B or Some A are not B where A is one term and B is another All A are B and No A are B are termed universal propositions Some A are B and Some A are not B are termed particular propositions More modern logicians allow some variation Each of the premises has one term in common with the conclusion in a major premise this is the major term i e the predicate of the conclusion in a minor premise this is the minor term i e the subject of the conclusion For example Major premise All humans are mortal Minor premise All Greeks are humans Conclusion All Greeks are mortal Each of the three distinct terms represents a category From the example above humans mortal and Greeks mortal is the major term and Greeks the minor term The premises also have one term in common with each other which is known as the middle term in this example humans Both of the premises are universal as is the conclusion Major premise All mortals die Minor premise All men are mortals Conclusion All men die Here the major term is die the minor term is men and the middle term is mortals Again both premises are universal hence so is the conclusion Polysyllogism Edit Main article Polysyllogism A polysyllogism or a sorites is a form of argument in which a series of incomplete syllogisms is so arranged that the predicate of each premise forms the subject of the next until the subject of the first is joined with the predicate of the last in the conclusion For example one might argue that all lions are big cats all big cats are predators and all predators are carnivores To conclude that therefore all lions are carnivores is to construct a sorites argument Types EditThis section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed July 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Relationships between the four types of propositions in the square of opposition Black areas are empty red areas are nonempty Further information List of valid argument forms There are infinitely many possible syllogisms but only 256 logically distinct types and only 24 valid types enumerated below A syllogism takes the form note M Middle S subject P predicate Major premise All M are P Minor premise All S are M Conclusion All S are P The premises and conclusion of a syllogism can be any of four types which are labeled by letters 14 as follows The meaning of the letters is given by the table code quantifier subject copula predicate type exampleA All S are P universal affirmative All humans are mortal E No S are P universal negative No humans are perfect I Some S are P particular affirmative Some humans are healthy O Some S are not P particular negative Some humans are not clever In Prior Analytics Aristotle uses mostly the letters A B and C Greek letters alpha beta and gamma as term place holders rather than giving concrete examples It is traditional to use is rather than are as the copula hence All A is B rather than All As are Bs It is traditional and convenient practice to use a e i o as infix operators so the categorical statements can be written succinctly The following table shows the longer form the succinct shorthand and equivalent expressions in predicate logic Form Shorthand Predicate logicAll A is B AaB x A x B x displaystyle forall x A x rightarrow B x or x A x B x displaystyle neg exists x A x land neg B x No A is B AeB x A x B x displaystyle neg exists x A x land B x or x A x B x displaystyle forall x A x rightarrow neg B x Some A is B AiB x A x B x displaystyle exists x A x land B x Some A is not B AoB x A x B x displaystyle exists x A x land neg B x The convention here is that the letter S is the subject of the conclusion P is the predicate of the conclusion and M is the middle term The major premise links M with P and the minor premise links M with S However the middle term can be either the subject or the predicate of each premise where it appears The differing positions of the major minor and middle terms gives rise to another classification of syllogisms known as the figure Given that in each case the conclusion is S P the four figures are Figure 1 Figure 2 Figure 3 Figure 4Major premise M P P M M P P MMinor premise S M S M M S M S Note however that following Aristotle s treatment of the figures some logicians e g Peter Abelard and Jean Buridan reject the fourth figure as a figure distinct from the first Putting it all together there are 256 possible types of syllogisms or 512 if the order of the major and minor premises is changed though this makes no difference logically Each premise and the conclusion can be of type A E I or O and the syllogism can be any of the four figures A syllogism can be described briefly by giving the letters for the premises and conclusion followed by the number for the figure For example the syllogism BARBARA below is AAA 1 or A A A in the first figure The vast majority of the 256 possible forms of syllogism are invalid the conclusion does not follow logically from the premises The table below shows the valid forms Even some of these are sometimes considered to commit the existential fallacy meaning they are invalid if they mention an empty category These controversial patterns are marked in italics All but four of the patterns in italics felapton darapti fesapo and bamalip are weakened moods i e it is possible to draw a stronger conclusion from the premises Figure 1 Figure 2 Figure 3 Figure 4Barbara Cesare Datisi CalemesCelarent Camestres Disamis DimatisDarii Festino Ferison FresisonFerio Baroco Bocardo CalemosBarbari Cesaro Felapton FesapoCelaront Camestros Darapti Bamalip Fig 1 treble clef A syllogism s letters can be best represented in music take E for example Marilyn Damord citation needed The letters A E I and O have been used since the medieval Schools to form mnemonic names for the forms as follows Barbara stands for AAA Celarent for EAE etc Next to each premise and conclusion is a shorthand description of the sentence So in AAI 3 the premise All squares are rectangles becomes MaP the symbols mean that the first term square is the middle term the second term rectangle is the predicate of the conclusion and the relationship between the two terms is labeled a All M are P The following table shows all syllogisms that are essentially different The similar syllogisms share the same premises just written in a different way For example Some pets are kittens SiM in Darii could also be written as Some kittens are pets MiS in Datisi In the Venn diagrams the black areas indicate no elements and the red areas indicate at least one element In the predicate logic expressions a horizontal bar over an expression means to negate logical not the result of that expression It is also possible to use graphs consisting of vertices and edges to evaluate syllogisms 15 Examples Edit M men S Greeks P mortal Barbara AAA 1 Edit All men are mortal MaP All Greeks are men SaM All Greeks are mortal SaP M reptile S snake P fur Celarent EAE 1 Edit Similar Cesare EAE 2 No reptile has fur MeP All snakes are reptiles SaM No snake has fur SeP Camestres AEE 2 M reptile S fur P snakeCamestres is essentially like Celarent with S and P exchanged Similar Calemes AEE 4 All snakes are reptiles PaM No fur bearing animal is a reptile SeM No fur bearing animal is a snake SeP M rabbit S pet P fur Darii AII 1 Edit Similar Datisi AII 3 All rabbits have fur MaP Some pets are rabbits SiM Some pets have fur SiP Disamis IAI 3 M rabbit S fur P petDisamis is essentially like Darii with S and P exchanged Similar Dimatis IAI 4 Some rabbits are pets MiP All rabbits have fur MaS Some fur bearing animals are pets SiP M homework S reading P fun Ferio EIO 1 Edit Similar Festino EIO 2 Ferison EIO 3 Fresison EIO 4 No homework is fun MeP Some reading is homework SiM Some reading is not fun SoP M mammal S pet P cat Baroco AOO 2 Edit All cats are mammals PaM Some pets are not mammals SoM Some pets are not cats SoP M cat S mammal P pet Bocardo OAO 3 Edit Some cats are not pets MoP All cats are mammals MaS Some mammals are not pets SoP M man S Greek P mortal Barbari AAI 1 Edit All men are mortal MaP All Greeks are men SaM Some Greeks are mortal SiP Bamalip AAI 4 M man S mortal P GreekBamalip is exactly like Barbari with S and P exchanged All Greeks are men PaM All men are mortals MaS Some mortals are Greek SiP M reptile S snake P fur Celaront EAO 1 Edit Similar Cesaro EAO 2 No reptiles have fur MeP All snakes are reptiles SaM Some snakes have no fur SoP M hooves S human P horse Camestros AEO 2 Edit Similar Calemos AEO 4 All horses have hooves PaM No humans have hooves SeM All humans are not horses SoP M flower S plant P animal Felapton EAO 3 Edit Similar Fesapo EAO 4 No flowers are animals MeP All flowers are plants MaS Some plants are not animals SoP M square S rhomb P rectangle Darapti AAI 3 Edit All squares are rectangles MaP All squares are rhombuses MaS Some rhombuses are rectangles SiP Table of all syllogisms Edit This table shows all 24 valid syllogisms represented by Venn diagrams Columns indicate similarity and are grouped by combinations of premises Borders correspond to conclusions Those with an existential assumption are dashed figure A A A E A I A O E I1 Barbara Barbari Celarent Celaront Darii Ferio2 Camestres Camestros Cesare Cesaro Baroco Festino3 Darapti Felapton Datisi Disamis Bocardo Ferison4 Bamalip Calemes Calemos Fesapo Dimatis FresisonTerms in syllogism EditThis section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed July 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message With Aristotle we may distinguish singular terms such as Socrates and general terms such as Greeks Aristotle further distinguished types a and b terms that could be the subject of predication andterms that could be predicated of others by the use of the copula is a Such a predication is known as a distributive as opposed to non distributive as in Greeks are numerous It is clear that Aristotle s syllogism works only for distributive predication since we cannot reason All Greeks are animals animals are numerous therefore all Greeks are numerous In Aristotle s view singular terms were of type a and general terms of type b Thus Men can be predicated of Socrates but Socrates cannot be predicated of anything Therefore for a term to be interchangeable to be either in the subject or predicate position of a proposition in a syllogism the terms must be general terms or categorical terms as they came to be called Consequently the propositions of a syllogism should be categorical propositions both terms general and syllogisms that employ only categorical terms came to be called categorical syllogisms It is clear that nothing would prevent a singular term occurring in a syllogism so long as it was always in the subject position however such a syllogism even if valid is not a categorical syllogism An example is Socrates is a man all men are mortal therefore Socrates is mortal Intuitively this is as valid as All Greeks are men all men are mortal therefore all Greeks are mortals To argue that its validity can be explained by the theory of syllogism would require that we show that Socrates is a man is the equivalent of a categorical proposition It can be argued Socrates is a man is equivalent to All that are identical to Socrates are men so our non categorical syllogism can be justified by use of the equivalence above and then citing BARBARA Existential import EditThis section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed July 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message If a statement includes a term such that the statement is false if the term has no instances then the statement is said to have existential import with respect to that term It is ambiguous whether or not a universal statement of the form All A is B is to be considered as true false or even meaningless if there are no As If it is considered as false in such cases then the statement All A is B has existential import with respect to A It is claimed Aristotle s logic system does not cover cases where there are no instances Aristotle s goal was to develop a companion logic for science He relegates fictions such as mermaids and unicorns to the realms of poetry and literature In his mind they exist outside the ambit of science which is why he leaves no room for such non existent entities in his logic This is a thoughtful choice not an inadvertent omission Technically Aristotelian science is a search for definitions where a definition is a phrase signifying a thing s essence Because non existent entities cannot be anything they do not in Aristotle s mind possess an essence This is why he leaves no place for fictional entities like goat stags or unicorns 16 However many logic systems developed since do consider the case where there may be no instances Medieval logicians were aware of the problem of existential import and maintained that negative propositions do not carry existential import and that positive propositions with subjects that do not supposit are false The following problems arise a In natural language and normal use which statements of the forms All A is B No A is B Some A is B and Some A is not B have existential import and with respect to which terms In the four forms of categorical statements used in syllogism which statements of the form AaB AeB AiB and AoB have existential import and with respect to which terms What existential imports must the forms AaB AeB AiB and AoB have for the square of opposition to be valid What existential imports must the forms AaB AeB AiB and AoB have to preserve the validity of the traditionally valid forms of syllogisms Are the existential imports required to satisfy d above such that the normal uses in natural languages of the forms All A is B No A is B Some A is B and Some A is not B are intuitively and fairly reflected by the categorical statements of forms AaB AeB AiB and AoB For example if it is accepted that AiB is false if there are no As and AaB entails AiB then AiB has existential import with respect to A and so does AaB Further if it is accepted that AiB entails BiA then AiB and AaB have existential import with respect to B as well Similarly if AoB is false if there are no As and AeB entails AoB and AeB entails BeA which in turn entails BoA then both AeB and AoB have existential import with respect to both A and B It follows immediately that all universal categorical statements have existential import with respect to both terms If AaB and AeB is a fair representation of the use of statements in normal natural language of All A is B and No A is B respectively then the following example consequences arise All flying horses are mythical is false if there are no flying horses If No men are fire eating rabbits is true then There are fire eating rabbits is true and so on If it is ruled that no universal statement has existential import then the square of opposition fails in several respects e g AaB does not entail AiB and a number of syllogisms are no longer valid e g BaC AaB gt AiC These problems and paradoxes arise in both natural language statements and statements in syllogism form because of ambiguity in particular ambiguity with respect to All If Fred claims all his books were Pulitzer Prize winners is Fred claiming that he wrote any books If not then is what he claims true Suppose Jane says none of her friends are poor is that true if she has no friends The first order predicate calculus avoids such ambiguity by using formulae that carry no existential import with respect to universal statements Existential claims must be explicitly stated Thus natural language statements of the forms All A is B No A is B Some A is B and Some A is not B can be represented in first order predicate calculus in which any existential import with respect to terms A and or B is either explicit or not made at all Consequently the four forms AaB AeB AiB and AoB can be represented in first order predicate in every combination of existential import so it can establish which construal if any preserves the square of opposition and the validity of the traditionally valid syllogism Strawson claims such a construal is possible but the results are such that in his view the answer to question e above is no Syllogistic fallacies EditSee also Syllogistic fallacy People often make mistakes when reasoning syllogistically 17 For instance from the premises some A are B some B are C people tend to come to a definitive conclusion that therefore some A are C 18 19 However this does not follow according to the rules of classical logic For instance while some cats A are black things B and some black things B are televisions C it does not follow from the parameters that some cats A are televisions C This is because in the structure of the syllogism invoked i e III 1 the middle term is not distributed in either the major premise or in the minor premise a pattern called the fallacy of the undistributed middle Because of this it can be hard to follow formal logic and a closer eye is needed in order to ensure that an argument is in fact valid 20 Determining the validity of a syllogism involves determining the distribution of each term in each statement meaning whether all members of that term are accounted for In simple syllogistic patterns the fallacies of invalid patterns are Undistributed middle Neither of the premises accounts for all members of the middle term which consequently fails to link the major and minor term Illicit treatment of the major term The conclusion implicates all members of the major term P meaning the proposition is negative however the major premise does not account for them all i e P is either an affirmative predicate or a particular subject there Illicit treatment of the minor term Same as above but for the minor term S meaning the proposition is universal and minor premise where S is either a particular subject or an affirmative predicate Exclusive premises Both premises are negative meaning no link is established between the major and minor terms Affirmative conclusion from a negative premise If either premise is negative the conclusion must also be Negative conclusion from affirmative premises If both premises are affirmative the conclusion must also be Other types of syllogism EditDisjunctive syllogism Hypothetical syllogism Legal syllogism Polysyllogism Prosleptic syllogism Quasi syllogism Statistical syllogismSee also Edit Philosophy portalSyllogistic fallacy Argumentation theory Buddhist logic Enthymeme Formal fallacy Logical fallacy The False Subtlety of the Four Syllogistic Figures Tautology logic Venn diagramReferences Edit Lundberg Christian 2018 The Essential Guide to Rhetoric Bedford St Martin s p 38 John Stuart Mill A System of Logic Ratiocinative and Inductive Being a Connected View of the Principles of Evidence and the Methods of Scientific Investigation 3rd ed vol 1 chap 2 London John W Parker 1851 190 a b Frede Michael 1975 Stoic vs Peripatetic Syllogistic Archive for the History of Philosophy 56 99 124 Hurley Patrick J 2011 A Concise Introduction to Logic Cengage Learning ISBN 9780840034175 Zegarelli Mark 2010 Logic for Dummies John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 9781118053072 Aristotle Prior Analytics 24b18 20 Bobzien Susanne 2006 2020 Ancient Logic Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Aristotle Lagerlund Henrik 2 February 2004 Medieval Theories of the Syllogism The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Edward N Zalta Retrieved 17 February 2014 a b Bacon Francis 1620 2001 The Great Instauration via Constitution Society Archived from the original on 13 April 2019 Boole George 1854 2003 The Laws of Thought with an introduction by J Corcoran Buffalo Prometheus Books van Evra James 2004 The Laws of Thought by George Boole review Philosophy in Review 24 167 69 a b Corcoran John 2003 Aristotle s Prior Analytics and Boole s Laws of Thought History and Philosophy of Logic 24 261 88 Philosophical Dictionary Caird Catharsis Philosophypages com 2002 08 08 Retrieved 2009 12 14 According to Copi p 127 The letter names are presumed to come from the Latin words AffIrmo and nEgO which mean I affirm and I deny respectively the first capitalized letter of each word is for universal the second for particular Syllogisms Made Easy Archived from the original on 2021 12 11 via www youtube com Groarke Louis F Aristotle Logic section 7 Existential Assumptions Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Archived from the original on 2017 02 04 Retrieved 2017 03 07 See e g Evans J St B T 1989 Bias in human reasoning London LEA Khemlani S and P N Johnson Laird 2012 Theories of the syllogism A meta analysis Psychological Bulletin 138 427 57 Chater N and M Oaksford 1999 The Probability Heuristics Model of Syllogistic Reasoning Cognitive Psychology 38 191 258 Lundberg Christian 2018 The Essential Guide to Rhetoric Bedford St Martin s p 39 Sources Edit Aristotle c 350 BCE 1989 Prior Analytics translated by R Smith Hackett ISBN 0 87220 064 7 Blackburn Simon 1994 1996 Syllogism In The Oxford Dictionary of Philosophy Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 283134 8 Broadie Alexander 1993 Introduction to Medieval Logic Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 824026 0 Copi Irving 1969 Introduction to Logic 3rd ed Macmillan Company Corcoran John 1972 Completeness of an ancient logic Journal of Symbolic Logic 37 696 702 1994 The founding of logic Modern interpretations of Aristotle s logic Ancient Philosophy 14 9 24 Corcoran John and Hassan Masoud 2015 Existential Import Today New Metatheorems Historical Philosophical and Pedagogical Misconceptions History and Philosophy of Logic 36 1 39 61 Englebretsen George 1987 The New Syllogistic Bern Peter Lang Hamblin Charles Leonard 1970 Fallacies London Methuen ISBN 0 416 70070 5 Cf on validity of syllogisms A simple set of rules of validity was finally produced in the later Middle Ages based on the concept of Distribution Lukasiewicz Jan 1957 1987 Aristotle s Syllogistic from the Standpoint of Modern Formal Logic New York Garland Publishers ISBN 0 8240 6924 2 OCLC 15015545 Malink Marko 2013 Aristotle s Modal Syllogistic Cambridge MA Harvard University Press Patzig Gunter 1968 Aristotle s theory of the syllogism a logico philological study of Book A of the Prior Analytics Dordrecht Reidel Rescher Nicholas 1966 Galen and the Syllogism University of Pittsburgh Press ISBN 978 0822983958 Smiley Timothy 1973 What is a syllogism Journal of Philosophical Logic 2 136 54 Smith Robin 1986 Immediate propositions and Aristotle s proof theory Ancient Philosophy 6 47 68 Thom Paul 1981 The Syllogism Philosophia Munchen ISBN 3 88405 002 8 External links EditSmith Robin Aristotle s Logic In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Koutsoukou Argyraki Angeliki Aristotle s Assertoric Syllogistic Formal proof development in Isabelle HOL Archive of Formal Proofs Lagerlund Henrik Medieval Theories of the Syllogism In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Aristotle s Prior Analytics the Theory of Categorical Syllogism an annotated bibliography on Aristotle s syllogistic Fuzzy Syllogistic System Development of Fuzzy Syllogistic Algorithms and Applications Distributed Reasoning Approaches Comparison between the Aristotelian Syllogism and the Indian Tibetan Syllogism The Buddhist Philosophy of Universal Flux Chapter XXIII Members of a Syllogism avayava Online Syllogistic Machine An interactive syllogistic machine for exploring all the fallacies figures terms and modes of syllogisms Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Syllogism amp oldid 1133955686, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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