1 00:00:00,480 --> 00:00:08,580 Right now, we're onto the third week now, and this week we're going to learn how to identify and how to analyse arguments and how to set them out. 2 00:00:08,580 --> 00:00:13,700 Logic, books, style. And the point of doing this is it enables you to get rid of all sorts of things. 3 00:00:13,700 --> 00:00:20,250 The true relevance of the argument and you set out the arguments of the structure of the arguments is very clear. 4 00:00:20,250 --> 00:00:25,980 That way it's much easier to evaluate. Okay, let's get started. 5 00:00:25,980 --> 00:00:29,640 Okay, just a brief recap, as usual, on last week. 6 00:00:29,640 --> 00:00:36,970 If you remember, we looked at the fact that there are two basic types of argument, deductive and inductive. 7 00:00:36,970 --> 00:00:42,750 And we saw that deductive arguments are such that. 8 00:00:42,750 --> 00:00:47,310 Come on, tell me. Don't look at your handouts. Tell me what a deductive argument is. 9 00:00:47,310 --> 00:00:53,390 How do you recognise it? Oh, woo hoo! 10 00:00:53,390 --> 00:00:58,470 I'm too good. Haven't you done well? You're absolutely right. That's right. 11 00:00:58,470 --> 00:01:02,700 The truth of the premise makes the truth of conclusion certain. 12 00:01:02,700 --> 00:01:08,400 Or those of you who use the word guarantee. The truth of the premise guarantees the truth as a conclusion. 13 00:01:08,400 --> 00:01:18,070 Well done. That's absolutely right. Okay, then. Inductive arguments are such that. 14 00:01:18,070 --> 00:01:21,200 Good. Okay, I can hear that you've got it as well. Okay. 15 00:01:21,200 --> 00:01:25,500 I'll put it slightly differently this week because if you remember last week we got into trouble with the 16 00:01:25,500 --> 00:01:32,130 way I phrase this is more or less because we don't want promises making less probable the conclusion do it. 17 00:01:32,130 --> 00:01:37,380 So I've said the truth of the premise makes the truth of the conclusion more likely. 18 00:01:37,380 --> 00:01:46,890 And of course, as you know, it's either much more likely, as in the case of the sun has risen in there every day in the whole history of the universe. 19 00:01:46,890 --> 00:01:52,170 Therefore, it's likely it'll rise tomorrow. And it's really pretty likely, isn't it? 20 00:01:52,170 --> 00:01:57,150 It's almost certain or slightly more likely. 21 00:01:57,150 --> 00:02:04,320 So the fact that every time you see me I'd be wearing earrings makes it slightly more likely that the next time you see me, I'll be wearing earrings. 22 00:02:04,320 --> 00:02:10,740 So the the whereas deduction is an either or thing. 23 00:02:10,740 --> 00:02:17,710 Induction is a matter of degree. An argument is more or less strong. 24 00:02:17,710 --> 00:02:23,790 Good. We then looked at some examples of arguments that a deductively valid in virtue of their form. 25 00:02:23,790 --> 00:02:30,430 And you remember I was using the PS and Qs and so on to talk about things like Motus Poland's Modus Tolan's and so on. 26 00:02:30,430 --> 00:02:34,170 So we've got if P, then Q P, therefore. 27 00:02:34,170 --> 00:02:40,380 Q That's valid in Virtu its form because it doesn't matter what you're talking about, 28 00:02:40,380 --> 00:02:50,100 it doesn't matter what sentences you put in for P or Q and if these, if the structure of the argument is if P then Q P therefore. 29 00:02:50,100 --> 00:02:55,830 Q it will be valid. Okay, so then we looked at some arguments. 30 00:02:55,830 --> 00:03:04,070 Does the deductively valid in virtue of their contents. Can you remember any of those. 31 00:03:04,070 --> 00:03:16,110 This is a bit harder because they were only examples that we gave. Not quite. 32 00:03:16,110 --> 00:03:20,370 Lying is wrong, therefore we shouldn't lie. Exactly. 33 00:03:20,370 --> 00:03:30,060 Do you see how that is? If that's a deductively valid argument, it's in virtue of the meaning of the word wrong, isn't it? 34 00:03:30,060 --> 00:03:38,190 Lying is wrong. Therefore, we shouldn't lie. So the thought is that if you understand the word wrong properly, you'll see that if lying is wrong. 35 00:03:38,190 --> 00:03:42,960 If you believe lying is wrong, then you will also believe that you shouldn't lie. 36 00:03:42,960 --> 00:03:48,870 Doesn't mean you won't lie. But it does mean that if you do, you'll feel guilty or whatever. 37 00:03:48,870 --> 00:03:51,690 But that's in virtue of the meaning of the word wrong. 38 00:03:51,690 --> 00:04:02,890 Can you remember any other arguments that were valid in virtue of the content, the meaning of particular words? 39 00:04:02,890 --> 00:04:10,180 Jessica. Right. 40 00:04:10,180 --> 00:04:18,550 I can't remember the particular example I used the. I didn't think that would have been one, actually. 41 00:04:18,550 --> 00:04:25,150 I might be wrong about that, but have a feeling that was an example that I used of one of the ones that's valid in virtual form. 42 00:04:25,150 --> 00:04:29,290 OK. No, that came later. 43 00:04:29,290 --> 00:04:34,880 Temporal. Yes. OK. That was one. Can you remember how that went? 44 00:04:34,880 --> 00:04:38,440 OK. That's right. 45 00:04:38,440 --> 00:04:43,030 It's raining today. Therefore, tomorrow it will have rained today. 46 00:04:43,030 --> 00:04:52,300 Okay. And that that's because of the word tomorrow and our understanding of before and after and yesterday and today and so on. 47 00:04:52,300 --> 00:04:59,320 OK, good. Then we moved on to inductive arguments and we looked at several different examples of an inductive argument. 48 00:04:59,320 --> 00:05:05,230 Can you remember any of those? You mentioned wonderments ago. Yes. 49 00:05:05,230 --> 00:05:09,040 What was it about Einstein? It was an argument from authority. 50 00:05:09,040 --> 00:05:13,570 Good. Okay. So this man's an authority on this. 51 00:05:13,570 --> 00:05:18,690 Therefore, he said this. Therefore he's an authority on this. That's a bad way of looking at it. 52 00:05:18,690 --> 00:05:29,590 But you can see it. That assumes the principle of what what's behind every inductive argument? 53 00:05:29,590 --> 00:05:34,390 Logic. Yes. Continuity. 54 00:05:34,390 --> 00:05:40,060 Yes. Can anyone put it in the way I put it last week? There's a principle that Hume is most famous for. 55 00:05:40,060 --> 00:05:46,300 David Hume. He said the principle of the uniformity of of nature. 56 00:05:46,300 --> 00:05:50,740 That's right. So what's happened in the past will happen in the future. 57 00:05:50,740 --> 00:05:54,370 If it was like that in the past, it's going to be like that in the future. 58 00:05:54,370 --> 00:06:03,820 And so that's the principle of the uniformity of nature, which underlies every inductive argument and which can't itself be argued for. 59 00:06:03,820 --> 00:06:08,080 Because arguing for it takes us in a circle. Why is the future like the past? 60 00:06:08,080 --> 00:06:13,950 Because it always has been. Well, again, we're relying on induction, aren't we? 61 00:06:13,950 --> 00:06:17,290 Okay. So we looked at some examples this week. 62 00:06:17,290 --> 00:06:23,860 We're going to be learning how to identify and analyse arguments and how to set them out to logic books style. 63 00:06:23,860 --> 00:06:30,400 So if you've got some arguments from this week that you had trouble analysing or you had trouble recognising, 64 00:06:30,400 --> 00:06:37,940 you'll be able to use the arguments that you found this week to practise what we're going to learn today. 65 00:06:37,940 --> 00:06:42,400 Okay, so let's start by seeing an argument set out logic bookstall. 66 00:06:42,400 --> 00:06:49,620 You're getting sick of this argument, aren't you? I'm getting sick of this argument, but here it is again, set out logic, book style. 67 00:06:49,620 --> 00:06:54,630 Okay. You don't have to write out premiss one in full. You can just put P one or you don't even have to put that. 68 00:06:54,630 --> 00:06:58,930 You can just assume that the premises come first and then the conclusion. 69 00:06:58,930 --> 00:07:06,220 But that's an argument set out logic bookstall. And you might say, well, what's the point of setting out arguments. 70 00:07:06,220 --> 00:07:11,530 Logic bookstall. Has anyone got any idea why. Why do we bother setting out arguments. 71 00:07:11,530 --> 00:07:16,960 Logic bookstall. Yes, absolutely. 72 00:07:16,960 --> 00:07:23,290 Yes. What makes it so much stronger? 73 00:07:23,290 --> 00:07:30,230 It should make it stronger because what you're doing is setting out an argument logic bookstall is just identifying the arguments. 74 00:07:30,230 --> 00:07:34,900 You therefore you shouldn't you shouldn't be able to make it either stronger or weaker. 75 00:07:34,900 --> 00:07:40,540 All you're doing is identifying what the argument is. So we're not evaluating it at the moment. 76 00:07:40,540 --> 00:07:48,580 We're just analysing it. Just setting it out. Logic bookstall. 77 00:07:48,580 --> 00:07:55,790 Include assumptions, goodtimes and logic you would have to include. 78 00:07:55,790 --> 00:08:02,600 Absolutely, that's. That's right. What we do in setting out an argument logic bookstall is we actually identify all the premises. 79 00:08:02,600 --> 00:08:07,100 So if there's this is a suppressed premise or an assumption, as Paul says, 80 00:08:07,100 --> 00:08:20,060 we try and make it explicit if we can do it in a sense, to rearrange the sentences, to work out what the premises. 81 00:08:20,060 --> 00:08:24,320 Absolutely. It's a set format. So if you remember what was on there, you what premise. 82 00:08:24,320 --> 00:08:28,910 Premise, conclusion. So we know exactly what is being argued for. 83 00:08:28,910 --> 00:08:35,720 Because that's what the conclusion is, isn't it? And we know exactly what's being put forward as reasons for believing that thing. 84 00:08:35,720 --> 00:08:39,350 Which are the premises? Any other ideas on this one. One, two. 85 00:08:39,350 --> 00:08:58,330 And then we'll move on. It's. That's right, because if you remember, I was asking you to identify the premises and the conclusion. 86 00:08:58,330 --> 00:09:02,890 Of course, you have to be able to do that to set out an argument, logic bookstall. 87 00:09:02,890 --> 00:09:06,840 But once you've done it, once you've set it out logic stall, then it's obvious. 88 00:09:06,840 --> 00:09:11,640 Yeah. One, two. Gentlemen behind you is this. 89 00:09:11,640 --> 00:09:18,770 Yes. And by just building on that point, it enables you to identify what form of arguments. 90 00:09:18,770 --> 00:09:23,210 And it can do. Yes, yes, yes. 91 00:09:23,210 --> 00:09:32,830 That might also come later again, we'll have a look at that later on. One more. 92 00:09:32,830 --> 00:09:37,990 Up to a point, as we'll see, Lord Copper. OK. 93 00:09:37,990 --> 00:09:43,780 I put down. That's the one we mentioned. It enables us to add suppressed premises. 94 00:09:43,780 --> 00:09:50,320 It enables us to eliminate cross references, irrelevancies and inconsistent terms. 95 00:09:50,320 --> 00:09:54,310 Okay. And that makes it much easier to identify the argument. 96 00:09:54,310 --> 00:09:58,410 We'll go through all this. So if you don't quite understand what I mean here, don't worry about it, Will. 97 00:09:58,410 --> 00:10:07,390 We'll cover it in a minute. And it makes it much, much easier to evaluate the argument, as I hope you'll see today. 98 00:10:07,390 --> 00:10:15,280 Okay. Right. On the surface of it, it's easy to set out arguments, logic bookstall. 99 00:10:15,280 --> 00:10:19,450 Let's try this one. If you're familiar with this, you've seen this argument before. 100 00:10:19,450 --> 00:10:26,260 First of all, tell me, what's the conclusion of this argument? Tell me what. Which is the conclusion. 101 00:10:26,260 --> 00:10:33,030 Good. Edinburgh's north of Oxford. So Premiss one. Good. 102 00:10:33,030 --> 00:10:36,930 And I'm glad you left out the words since. Because that's a logical word, isn't it? 103 00:10:36,930 --> 00:10:41,160 That doesn't. That's not actually part of the sentence. That is the premise. 104 00:10:41,160 --> 00:10:45,150 So you were absolutely right to leave that out. OK. Premiss one, then. 105 00:10:45,150 --> 00:10:53,550 So you're writing down Premiss one. Manchester is north of Oxford. Premiss to Edinburgh is north of Manchester. 106 00:10:53,550 --> 00:10:58,460 Good. And the conclusion? Edinburgh is north of Oxford. And you left out since and. 107 00:10:58,460 --> 00:11:05,070 Well done. Those two are the logical words. They're the words on which the validity of the argument hangs. 108 00:11:05,070 --> 00:11:11,470 As we'll see later. But we leave them out of the identification of the premise and the conclusion. 109 00:11:11,470 --> 00:11:18,890 Okay, let's try this one. What's the conclusion? 110 00:11:18,890 --> 00:11:25,880 Which is float? Yep. OK. The conclusion is which float premise one. 111 00:11:25,880 --> 00:11:29,840 Which is a made of wood. Wood floats. Good. 112 00:11:29,840 --> 00:11:34,400 Again, you left out the logical choice and that's right. Can I just give you a warning of this? 113 00:11:34,400 --> 00:11:44,300 And is a logical word. But and here is connecting which two parts of language and two of the same parts of language. 114 00:11:44,300 --> 00:11:50,370 What's it connecting here? To use two premises. 115 00:11:50,370 --> 00:11:57,540 OK. But what a premises, their sentences. So and here is a sentence connecter. 116 00:11:57,540 --> 00:12:03,510 Okay, we can connect any sentences we want here. Here it is used again, connecting these two sentences. 117 00:12:03,510 --> 00:12:08,500 But what about this one? Oedipus is a black and white cat. 118 00:12:08,500 --> 00:12:15,420 OK. And working as a sentence connective there, Oedipus is a black and white cat. 119 00:12:15,420 --> 00:12:21,330 What's it connecting their two adjectives or two predicates, as we would say in logic. 120 00:12:21,330 --> 00:12:29,490 So you've got to be a bit careful when you see and in a sentence sometimes and will be part of the content if it's not. 121 00:12:29,490 --> 00:12:34,260 Combining two sentences but two predicates. Are you with me? 122 00:12:34,260 --> 00:12:38,920 So just watch out for that. Keep keep an eye open for that. 123 00:12:38,920 --> 00:12:42,450 Right. Good. Well, we've set those two out logic bookstores. Okay. 124 00:12:42,450 --> 00:12:46,230 Now try this one. Okay. 125 00:12:46,230 --> 00:12:52,020 Now I'm not serious about your trying that one right and minute, but we are going to do that one before the end of today. 126 00:12:52,020 --> 00:12:54,720 Okay. But this is another reason we set it out. 127 00:12:54,720 --> 00:13:01,170 Logic book style, because you can look straight at those arguments and you can pretty well see what the form is, can't you? 128 00:13:01,170 --> 00:13:05,340 You can see the other ones. You can see whether they're good arguments. You can tell straight off. 129 00:13:05,340 --> 00:13:14,880 But this is now those of you who found arguments from magazines or newspapers that this week were your arguments more like that one or more? 130 00:13:14,880 --> 00:13:18,180 Yes. Again, this is why they're so difficult, because actually, 131 00:13:18,180 --> 00:13:25,080 when we're in the pub arguing with each other about whether euthanasia is acceptable or not or whether we should go for assisted suicide or not. 132 00:13:25,080 --> 00:13:31,740 We had all sorts of things to our arguments. We say things like, well, if that's true, I'm a Dutchman. 133 00:13:31,740 --> 00:13:37,050 What does that mean? If that's true, I'm a Dutchman. 134 00:13:37,050 --> 00:13:41,310 What does that mean in English? It's not true. 135 00:13:41,310 --> 00:13:46,920 So when I say if that's true, I'm a Dutchman. All I'm actually saying is that's not true. 136 00:13:46,920 --> 00:13:53,040 Okay. Let's see if I can think of another one. No, I can't, because I'm doing this off the top of my head. 137 00:13:53,040 --> 00:13:58,080 But in English, when we're talking, we use all sorts of colloquialisms. We add all sorts of things. 138 00:13:58,080 --> 00:14:07,650 We add. We have all sorts of ums and ahs and ers. And it makes it very difficult to identify the argument itself. 139 00:14:07,650 --> 00:14:16,530 And that's what you're doing when you set out an argument. Logic book style is you're getting rid of all the irrelevancies. 140 00:14:16,530 --> 00:14:20,600 OK, here's a set of steps for analysing arguments. 141 00:14:20,600 --> 00:14:24,750 I'm not using this microphone. By the way, can people at the back hear me? 142 00:14:24,750 --> 00:14:29,360 Yeah. Okay, here's a set of steps for for analysing arguments. 143 00:14:29,360 --> 00:14:36,890 We're going to follow these steps today. And I meant to actually write them out on the board and I forgot. 144 00:14:36,890 --> 00:14:40,580 So you'll have to keep referring back as I ask you, what do we do next? 145 00:14:40,580 --> 00:14:45,650 You'll have to keep referring back to slide eleven. Okay. 146 00:14:45,650 --> 00:14:52,970 Firstly, let's look at identifying premises and conclusions. We've we've already done quite a lot of this, so this is fairly easy. 147 00:14:52,970 --> 00:15:00,110 We look for the argument indicators, and I've given quite a few here and. 148 00:15:00,110 --> 00:15:04,670 Then we identify. Well, OK. I didn't find the conclusion. What are we looking for? 149 00:15:04,670 --> 00:15:16,420 What? Tell me again what a conclusion is. Another bit of revision. 150 00:15:16,420 --> 00:15:23,560 Now, careful. What is the conclusion? It's not the reason for the truth of the other premises. 151 00:15:23,560 --> 00:15:32,240 The other premises is what she said, that she isn't it. What? That's right. 152 00:15:32,240 --> 00:15:35,430 It's what it is you're arguing for, isn't it? 153 00:15:35,430 --> 00:15:39,920 It's it's the final. You were just getting mixed up then. It's very easy to get mixed up. 154 00:15:39,920 --> 00:15:45,050 And when you get mixed up, course, you invert it, which gets everything wrong. But that's easy to do. 155 00:15:45,050 --> 00:15:47,090 But the conclusion you can only tell, 156 00:15:47,090 --> 00:15:56,090 which is the conclusion by looking at the function of that sentence in the argument and what the conclusion is, is the thing you are arguing for. 157 00:15:56,090 --> 00:16:03,830 It's in effect, the statement you're making. And then the premises are. 158 00:16:03,830 --> 00:16:08,360 The supporting evidence or the supporting reasons got to be a bit careful with 159 00:16:08,360 --> 00:16:14,520 evidence because they're not always their arguments rather than evidence. 160 00:16:14,520 --> 00:16:21,920 Yeah, exactly. So, yeah. Okay, good. Let's here's an easy one. 161 00:16:21,920 --> 00:16:25,490 Identify the argument indicators in these arguments. 162 00:16:25,490 --> 00:16:32,090 What about the first one, which is the argument indicator in this one though are actually since. 163 00:16:32,090 --> 00:16:35,950 Good. Is there another one four. Well done. 164 00:16:35,950 --> 00:16:42,280 You're getting good at this. Okay. What about this one? Put up your hands. This time I'm going to. 165 00:16:42,280 --> 00:16:48,160 Okay. What's the argument indicator in this one. Stick your hand up if you're. 166 00:16:48,160 --> 00:16:56,010 Once you found it. Because some people and I have to admit, I'm one of them. 167 00:16:56,010 --> 00:17:01,070 I think quite slowly. And if people yell out it's. 168 00:17:01,070 --> 00:17:09,050 They don't get a chance to think. OK, now you can all yell out together, because that's right. 169 00:17:09,050 --> 00:17:22,000 Yep, good. Okay, what about this one? Put your hands up again. Quite easy, this one, isn't it? 170 00:17:22,000 --> 00:17:26,920 Okay, again. Yep, there we are. And there it is. 171 00:17:26,920 --> 00:17:30,550 You got them all right. Oh, it's actually the red isn't very good, is it? Can you see that? 172 00:17:30,550 --> 00:17:36,400 I've marched to the mall in red. If you can't see, you'll see it on your handout. 173 00:17:36,400 --> 00:17:45,530 That's a shame. I didn't realise that the red doesn't show. OK, now we're going to practise looking at conclusions. 174 00:17:45,530 --> 00:17:49,390 We can. We've done this before. So this is difficult tool. 175 00:17:49,390 --> 00:17:57,170 What's the conclusion here? What is it? 176 00:17:57,170 --> 00:18:01,550 Have another. Don't yell out, okay? Have another look at the argument. 177 00:18:01,550 --> 00:18:08,210 Remind yourself what a conclusion is. And tell me Socrates is mortal. 178 00:18:08,210 --> 00:18:12,920 Yes. Why did you get that confused? I mean, there's a very good reason for getting it confused. 179 00:18:12,920 --> 00:18:18,920 What is it? What or what? It's not at the end. 180 00:18:18,920 --> 00:18:23,590 You are your you've been expecting to see the conclusion at the end, haven't you? 181 00:18:23,590 --> 00:18:27,710 But but as you see from this one, it doesn't need to be at the end in this one. 182 00:18:27,710 --> 00:18:31,610 It's in the middle, isn't it? So it's. 183 00:18:31,610 --> 00:18:40,190 Remember what I say that you can only tell which is the conclusion by looking at the function of played by a particular sentence. 184 00:18:40,190 --> 00:18:46,970 The conclusion is the sentence you are arguing for. Okay, so here's the. 185 00:18:46,970 --> 00:18:52,160 And it's this in red. Just as you said, Socrates is mortal. 186 00:18:52,160 --> 00:18:59,370 Is the conclusion. Okay. Find the conclusion of this argument. 187 00:18:59,370 --> 00:19:15,600 Now put up your hand again rather than yelling out. And don't worry, if it takes you a bit of time. 188 00:19:15,600 --> 00:19:24,640 Some people just do think more slowly and that's fine. OK. 189 00:19:24,640 --> 00:19:29,650 What is it that you're brilliant? 190 00:19:29,650 --> 00:19:33,800 You are exactly right. Socialism was doomed to failure. OK. 191 00:19:33,800 --> 00:19:48,360 As picked out in red. And what about this one? 192 00:19:48,360 --> 00:20:05,860 Hands up. OK, would you like to have a go? 193 00:20:05,860 --> 00:20:09,830 Yes. OK. They will continue to need help from industrial nations. 194 00:20:09,830 --> 00:20:12,260 Now here's a little hint for something that's come into you. 195 00:20:12,260 --> 00:20:21,120 Remember I said that setting something out logic bookstall enables you to remove cross references, irrelevancies and whatever the other one was. 196 00:20:21,120 --> 00:20:25,940 Okay, look at this one. Can you have an idea of what I meant there? 197 00:20:25,940 --> 00:20:30,860 Because this put up your hand if you can. If you think you see what I can mean. 198 00:20:30,860 --> 00:20:41,420 Okay. This. No, that's that's actually not what I mean there. 199 00:20:41,420 --> 00:20:43,160 I was thinking. 200 00:20:43,160 --> 00:20:50,810 I think you thought I mentioned the whole argument, but actually I just mentioned they will continue to need help from industrial nations. 201 00:20:50,810 --> 00:20:53,270 Just look at the conclusion there. 202 00:20:53,270 --> 00:21:04,520 Can you see what I might have meant by saying we need to remove cross references and inconsistent terms and so on, these newly emerging nations? 203 00:21:04,520 --> 00:21:10,430 Well done. Will continue because this lay is an honour for reference, isn't it? 204 00:21:10,430 --> 00:21:18,410 It takes us back to something that's already been said. And we need to identify that, because when we separate it out as the conclusion, 205 00:21:18,410 --> 00:21:24,620 we're left with the statement that actually that has no meaning, does it, in the they will continue to need to. 206 00:21:24,620 --> 00:21:31,140 Well, who's they? So we need to remove that cross reference and we'll be seeing how to do that later. 207 00:21:31,140 --> 00:21:36,530 First. Indeed there is, and we'll be looking at that later. 208 00:21:36,530 --> 00:21:42,820 Thank. Well done. OK. There's the conclusion, though, picked out in red. 209 00:21:42,820 --> 00:21:49,270 I'll pick it out in green next week. Yes. 210 00:21:49,270 --> 00:21:53,820 Okay, that's good idea. I'll do that. Yes, because it's already in bold. 211 00:21:53,820 --> 00:21:58,080 But I could easily do it. Or I could do it in capital letters. Good. 212 00:21:58,080 --> 00:22:03,240 OK. Identify all the premises of this argument. 213 00:22:03,240 --> 00:22:08,250 And don't forget that they might be a suppressed private now. This is going to take you a little longer. 214 00:22:08,250 --> 00:22:14,950 Don't call out. You might have to write it down and put up your hands when you've identified the premises of that argument. 215 00:22:14,950 --> 00:22:56,040 And a hint. There are two of them. Put up your hand when you've finished. 216 00:22:56,040 --> 00:23:01,140 You'll have to paraphrase a little bit. And if you're finding that, don't don't worry about it. 217 00:23:01,140 --> 00:23:05,550 If you're thinking I can't be right because I'm not using exactly the same words. 218 00:23:05,550 --> 00:23:12,060 Don't worry about that. Paraphrase is fine. What you mustn't do is change the meaning of anything. 219 00:23:12,060 --> 00:23:19,540 But paraphrasing it to get the grammar right or whatever is fine. OK. 220 00:23:19,540 --> 00:23:28,390 Right. Would you like to tell us, sir? Yes. Yep. 221 00:23:28,390 --> 00:23:38,380 OK. That's premise one. I take it, as you were writing, socialism did not provide the incentives. 222 00:23:38,380 --> 00:23:43,740 Incentives are needed. Yes, that that would do OK. 223 00:23:43,740 --> 00:23:48,420 Any variation on those themes? So here it is, premise one. 224 00:23:48,420 --> 00:23:55,260 Incentives are needed for a prosperous economy. Premise to socialism did not provides incentives. 225 00:23:55,260 --> 00:23:59,260 Conclusion. Socialism was doomed to failure. Okay. 226 00:23:59,260 --> 00:24:02,730 Do you see where both those premises come from? OK. 227 00:24:02,730 --> 00:24:10,700 They're needed. Which one is this? Suppressed premiss. Yes, that's right. 228 00:24:10,700 --> 00:24:18,290 The first one was suppressed in the original arguments, but but it's made explicit as we set out the argument logic bookstall. 229 00:24:18,290 --> 00:24:24,650 And if you had any variation on this theme, that's fine, so long as it has to say meaning. 230 00:24:24,650 --> 00:24:44,790 Does anyone want to cheque some? A prosperous, a prosperous economy. 231 00:24:44,790 --> 00:24:50,760 Well, I think what you'll think, well, is this what you're thinking of doomed to failure? 232 00:24:50,760 --> 00:24:56,700 I mean, you want something like you will only succeed if you have a prosperous economy, don't you? 233 00:24:56,700 --> 00:25:06,510 OK. That's really and you've got that in premise one, haven't you? 234 00:25:06,510 --> 00:25:12,480 Or you can have something like you have succeeded only a few if you have a prosperous economy. 235 00:25:12,480 --> 00:25:22,030 You could add, that's OK. You don't need to me. I mean, quite honestly, if you make explicit everything, you might find yourself. 236 00:25:22,030 --> 00:25:28,150 Is that my mobile? No, it's yours. Good but bad. 237 00:25:28,150 --> 00:25:40,850 But better than this being my son's. Not everybody would. 238 00:25:40,850 --> 00:25:50,630 I completely accept your point. I think you could easily add another premise and then you could say prosperous companies are needed for success. 239 00:25:50,630 --> 00:25:55,760 Incentives are needed for prosperous economies. Socialism did not provide incentives. 240 00:25:55,760 --> 00:25:58,910 Therefore, socialism was not a success or something. 241 00:25:58,910 --> 00:26:06,150 Do you see, I we could easily have added that one in as well and made explicit to suppress the premises. 242 00:26:06,150 --> 00:26:11,550 Yep. Fair enough. Okay. Anyone else have anything. Not quite. 243 00:26:11,550 --> 00:26:18,430 This. No. Okay, good. Let's do it again with this one. 244 00:26:18,430 --> 00:26:25,810 So since many newly emerging nations do not have the capital resources needed for necessary for sustained growth, 245 00:26:25,810 --> 00:26:37,060 they will continue to need help from industrial nations. You'll find actually, as you practise at this, it gets much, much easier. 246 00:26:37,060 --> 00:26:44,470 And another trick is, if you have not quite seen it, is to identify, identify the sentences that make up the premise. 247 00:26:44,470 --> 00:26:50,680 If if you can I mean, here you've only got one sentence and then see what else you need to make. 248 00:26:50,680 --> 00:27:03,920 Make an argument. OK, let's let's try some value. 249 00:27:03,920 --> 00:27:07,950 OK. So many newly emerging nations will continue to need help. 250 00:27:07,950 --> 00:27:20,110 Yep. And you won't have anything different. Yes, that's certainly implicit in that argument, so you can make it explicit if you like. 251 00:27:20,110 --> 00:27:36,500 Yep. OK. Well, no. 252 00:27:36,500 --> 00:27:44,900 Now, now, now you've got to be careful, because when you're identifying the premise, don't put it in anything that you happen to believe. 253 00:27:44,900 --> 00:27:50,540 What you're doing is you're identifying the argument that whoever it is that wrote this is making. 254 00:27:50,540 --> 00:27:57,890 Now, we haven't we're not yet evaluating the argument. We may decide that they're wrong in all sorts of ways. 255 00:27:57,890 --> 00:28:01,850 But what we don't do is add things on. 256 00:28:01,850 --> 00:28:05,630 All we're doing here is sticking to the meaning of the original. 257 00:28:05,630 --> 00:28:10,070 We can paraphrase, but we mustn't change the meaning to change the meaning. 258 00:28:10,070 --> 00:28:14,730 It is really bad. Really, really bad. 259 00:28:14,730 --> 00:28:18,410 OK. Is there anything else that anyone wants to try this. 260 00:28:18,410 --> 00:28:30,900 Oh yes. One more. Yup. 261 00:28:30,900 --> 00:28:32,040 Okay. 262 00:28:32,040 --> 00:28:42,390 When when you're writing suppressed premises, try and be careful not to add more than you need for the argument that I mean, let's have a look there. 263 00:28:42,390 --> 00:28:46,260 Let's see what I put down. And then let's see whether we still need that. 264 00:28:46,260 --> 00:28:51,540 So I've put down many newly emerging nations do not have capital resources. 265 00:28:51,540 --> 00:28:55,140 Capital resources are necessary for sustained growth. 266 00:28:55,140 --> 00:29:03,300 If a newly emerging nation is to sustain its growth and it does not have capital resources, it will need help from industrial nations. 267 00:29:03,300 --> 00:29:12,120 Conclusion many newly emerging nations will need help from industrial nations. 268 00:29:12,120 --> 00:29:20,920 Well, is it? Now, remember, in the very first week, we looked at the difference between implication and entailment. 269 00:29:20,920 --> 00:29:25,160 Does anyone remember what the difference between implication and entailment is? 270 00:29:25,160 --> 00:29:29,050 And don't worry if you do, because it's it's a very sophisticated distinction. 271 00:29:29,050 --> 00:29:44,060 But it's important to realise if we've got an if then statement, all we asserting either is the antecedent the if clause or the consequent. 272 00:29:44,060 --> 00:29:50,280 The then Claus. Or are we just saying if P, then Q. 273 00:29:50,280 --> 00:29:59,110 We're not actually claiming that P or Q Alwi. If we say if P, then Q. 274 00:29:59,110 --> 00:30:06,260 Are you with me? So. So is there a conclusion in if P, then Q. 275 00:30:06,260 --> 00:30:14,990 Is does this something of that structure have the premiss and conclusion's structure that would make it an argument? 276 00:30:14,990 --> 00:30:22,550 No, it doesn't, does it? What it has is two sentences combined with the logical phrase if then. 277 00:30:22,550 --> 00:30:27,980 But actually you're you're not claiming anything and you're not backing up anything by offering reasons. 278 00:30:27,980 --> 00:30:43,620 So it's not an argument. It's an implication. Do you understand that person? 279 00:30:43,620 --> 00:30:50,810 And that would be a case of putting in a suppressed premise too far from my perspective. 280 00:30:50,810 --> 00:30:57,740 And I think that's because we we haven't specified what help they need here. 281 00:30:57,740 --> 00:31:01,940 We're just saying. OK. 282 00:31:01,940 --> 00:31:07,730 You've got. If not, then that. 283 00:31:07,730 --> 00:31:13,440 And that's saying the F is. True. 284 00:31:13,440 --> 00:31:20,010 If you like, so then that we don't actually need to spell out what that is. 285 00:31:20,010 --> 00:31:25,220 I can see why you want that, but I would say it's not necessary for the argument. 286 00:31:25,220 --> 00:31:30,510 Well. You can just say what? Well. 287 00:31:30,510 --> 00:31:38,410 Would need help from the World Bank. You say you could destroy the argument by saying, well, by. 288 00:31:38,410 --> 00:31:52,340 Well, results. Well, yes, I did. 289 00:31:52,340 --> 00:31:57,470 The fact is what we're doing is we're identifying the argument. We're not evaluating it yet. 290 00:31:57,470 --> 00:32:01,910 Do you see? Do you see the difference? We're just identifying it. Then we evaluate it. 291 00:32:01,910 --> 00:32:03,710 So we do have to let the content go. 292 00:32:03,710 --> 00:32:11,060 But he is quite right that if there is another suppressed premise that that's needed for the argument, we need to bring it out. 293 00:32:11,060 --> 00:32:15,430 But I don't think that was one of them. At the third grade, 294 00:32:15,430 --> 00:32:19,810 I would have thought that the industrial nations have its fair capital resources 295 00:32:19,810 --> 00:32:23,950 because that would be the only way that they could provide help for the Middle East, 296 00:32:23,950 --> 00:32:40,100 for the. Well, it's this argument saying what sort of help they need from. 297 00:32:40,100 --> 00:32:52,120 I mean, I agree it's an implication there, but I don't think it's the only way. 298 00:32:52,120 --> 00:33:02,950 Ramming through the capital resources are necessary. OK. 299 00:33:02,950 --> 00:33:11,390 So it could be that instead of it will need help, we should change that help to capital resources. 300 00:33:11,390 --> 00:33:19,220 Do you see what I mean? So so it would then read many new names, emerging nations do not have capital resources. 301 00:33:19,220 --> 00:33:22,490 Capital resources are necessary for sustained growth. 302 00:33:22,490 --> 00:33:31,870 If a newly emerging nation is to sustain its growth and it does not have capital resources, it will need capital resources from industrial nations. 303 00:33:31,870 --> 00:33:37,850 Do you see what I mean? And then they in the same way would say many newly emerging nations will need capital 304 00:33:37,850 --> 00:33:42,800 resources from sustain so that we would be getting the premise that you want in. 305 00:33:42,800 --> 00:33:57,230 By removing inconsistent terms rather than by adding another premiss. 306 00:33:57,230 --> 00:34:03,530 But. But I'm saying it is. Well, I'll tell you what. Let's come back to this when we've looked at inconsistent terms. 307 00:34:03,530 --> 00:34:07,460 Because I hope then I'll be able to convince you that it is actually in there. 308 00:34:07,460 --> 00:34:13,880 It's just in there in an inconsistent way. OK. But but do remind me to come back. 309 00:34:13,880 --> 00:34:24,680 This is from industrial. 310 00:34:24,680 --> 00:34:32,660 Well, no, because the conclusion is that they will need help. I mean, don't forget, the premises may be false. 311 00:34:32,660 --> 00:34:40,310 I mean, nobody's saying that the premises are true at the moment. We're just wanting to identify the premise that, well, 312 00:34:40,310 --> 00:34:47,210 that's we worry about later when we're not evaluating the arguments at the moment, we're just analysing it. 313 00:34:47,210 --> 00:34:55,270 We're putting down exactly what was said in the argument or what was said and what was implied in the argument. 314 00:34:55,270 --> 00:35:09,710 Say why? Well, I think if we change that to capital resources, it does say that. 315 00:35:09,710 --> 00:35:10,130 I mean, 316 00:35:10,130 --> 00:35:20,990 aren't we implying in this argument that the help that the industrialised nations are giving to the newly emerging nations is capital resources? 317 00:35:20,990 --> 00:35:29,300 Yes, absolutely, yes. But that's why when when we get round to removing inconsistent terms, which we haven't got round to yet. 318 00:35:29,300 --> 00:35:33,410 That's one of the things we would want to make explicit. 319 00:35:33,410 --> 00:35:38,930 So there are different ways of making things explicit. One is by adding suppressed premises. 320 00:35:38,930 --> 00:35:44,030 And another is by by removing inconsistent terms. 321 00:35:44,030 --> 00:35:54,950 And well, I've already promised we'll come back to this argument when we've done that and make sure that we're clear on that. 322 00:35:54,950 --> 00:36:02,270 I wouldn't not at the moment, I wouldn't. 323 00:36:02,270 --> 00:36:07,250 OK, now you've done so well. We're going to try the really complicated arguments. 324 00:36:07,250 --> 00:36:12,160 Okay, we'll do that for the rest of the session. Here's the argument. 325 00:36:12,160 --> 00:36:18,580 Okay. This is the one by the end of this session, you will have analysed this argument and seen how it works. 326 00:36:18,580 --> 00:36:24,270 Okay. Firstly, identify the conclusion of this argument. 327 00:36:24,270 --> 00:36:28,420 Okay. Right. Who wants to who hasn't had to go. Would you like to have a go. 328 00:36:28,420 --> 00:36:34,680 What's the answer. Oh sorry. I was asking the lady the. 329 00:36:34,680 --> 00:36:43,480 You deserve to get stretched. There's a bit more to it than that. 330 00:36:43,480 --> 00:37:00,170 That is part of the conclusion. Well, it's not if you titular Tom, it it's if you if. 331 00:37:00,170 --> 00:37:07,620 OK. Somebody is somebody else. She didn't want. 332 00:37:07,620 --> 00:37:20,810 Just she didn't want you to articulate me, OK? Nope, wrong. Absolutely as the whole sentence. 333 00:37:20,810 --> 00:37:29,480 It's actually a conditional conclusion, if the poor thing did want you to tickle her tummy, you deserve to get scratched. 334 00:37:29,480 --> 00:37:34,910 So it's not that you deserve to get scratched on its own because you only deserve to get scratch. 335 00:37:34,910 --> 00:37:38,810 If she did want you to tickle her tummy. Do you see what I mean? 336 00:37:38,810 --> 00:37:42,110 That's the whole thing is a conditional conclusion. 337 00:37:42,110 --> 00:37:51,410 And you said something like, if you tickled to tummy and I wasn't sure whether you were leaving out there if she wanted you to tickle her tummy, 338 00:37:51,410 --> 00:37:59,150 because actually that's that's very important because there's a big difference between you tickled her tummy and she wanted you to tickle her tummy, 339 00:37:59,150 --> 00:38:06,740 isn't there? And for the purposes of this argument, that's actually quite an important difference. 340 00:38:06,740 --> 00:38:14,720 So the conclusion and I said there was a nice large argument indicator right in front of it and here it is. 341 00:38:14,720 --> 00:38:19,190 So if the poor thing did want you to tickle her tummy, you deserved to get scratched. 342 00:38:19,190 --> 00:38:22,840 That's the conclusion. OK. 343 00:38:22,840 --> 00:38:25,960 Ever unhappy with that? 344 00:38:25,960 --> 00:38:36,570 Can you see that the fact that it's a conditional sentence, a complex sentence doesn't stop it from being a conclusion because a conclusion is what? 345 00:38:36,570 --> 00:38:43,000 Again, it's it's the declaim for which you're arguing. 346 00:38:43,000 --> 00:38:47,520 That's right. It's a statement that you're making and that you're backing up with reasons. 347 00:38:47,520 --> 00:38:54,100 Okay. What's the next thing we do? Having identified the conclusion, we identify the premises. 348 00:38:54,100 --> 00:39:12,070 Okay. Identify the premises of that argument. Yes. 349 00:39:12,070 --> 00:39:20,860 Yes. There's sometimes within an argument. You get sort of sub arguments, but don't worry about that, treat it as a premise, not a conclusion. 350 00:39:20,860 --> 00:39:25,270 Okay. I think we're getting there. I'm going to reveal what I've got. 351 00:39:25,270 --> 00:39:30,910 And then you can tell me if you've got something else. OK. This is premiss one. 352 00:39:30,910 --> 00:39:36,850 Well, perhaps she didn't want you to tickle her tummy or she didn't realise that's what you were going to do. 353 00:39:36,850 --> 00:39:42,430 Now, I've just realised that I've I've misled you in something because I can. 354 00:39:42,430 --> 00:39:45,850 I praised you for leaving out the argument indicators, 355 00:39:45,850 --> 00:39:51,850 whereas actually the only argument in two cases I want you to leave out of that since this is in full force and so on, 356 00:39:51,850 --> 00:39:59,020 this or here is making this these two sentences into a complex sentence. 357 00:39:59,020 --> 00:40:02,350 So it's you should leave that in. OK. 358 00:40:02,350 --> 00:40:10,040 So the premise that you can see the structure that can't you P or Q So the or is part of it. 359 00:40:10,040 --> 00:40:16,750 Yeah. No you mustn't. 360 00:40:16,750 --> 00:40:25,780 The only one you can actually separate like that is and because if you have P and Q then just two separate premises will do. 361 00:40:25,780 --> 00:40:33,940 But if you have P or Q do you see that that's the or is rather the difference isn't it logically. 362 00:40:33,940 --> 00:40:39,480 You can't just have one sensor if I say, look, here's a way of doing it. 363 00:40:39,480 --> 00:40:46,290 And we're taking. If I've got a pen. Yes. Right. 364 00:40:46,290 --> 00:40:55,380 We're moving ahead a little bit here in what I'm going to tell you. So if you start getting confused, just stop your ears up. 365 00:40:55,380 --> 00:41:04,560 When we eventually get round to evaluating arguments, what we try and do is to set out the conditions under which each premise is true 366 00:41:04,560 --> 00:41:08,770 so we can then set out the conditions under which they're all true together. 367 00:41:08,770 --> 00:41:13,230 OK. Don't worry about how we do that at the moment. It's just that's what we try and do. 368 00:41:13,230 --> 00:41:22,080 Now, if I look at P and Q, I can say, well, this is true. 369 00:41:22,080 --> 00:41:31,860 This whole sentence is true, isn't it? If there's one world in which P is true and Q is true, is that right? 370 00:41:31,860 --> 00:41:37,770 Do you see intuitively that. So what is it for P and Q to be true. 371 00:41:37,770 --> 00:41:46,650 Well it's four P to be true. And Q to be true in the same world or in the same situation, if you prefer. 372 00:41:46,650 --> 00:41:52,830 So I can represent it just with one line and putting P and Q on the same line. 373 00:41:52,830 --> 00:42:03,000 Whereas if I say P all Q. I can't do that, can I, p or Q is true just in case. 374 00:42:03,000 --> 00:42:12,120 What's. Yeah, either peer's true or Q is true or sometimes both. 375 00:42:12,120 --> 00:42:19,180 So I'll have to draw two lines and put P on one line and Q on the other wouldn't I. 376 00:42:19,180 --> 00:42:26,110 In order to say P or Q so they have the different words, different logical words, 377 00:42:26,110 --> 00:42:34,690 and you see how if I separate the P and Q in one premiss, it doesn't really matter. 378 00:42:34,690 --> 00:42:43,930 Whereas if I separate the P or Q, it does matter because then I've only got one on each line. 379 00:42:43,930 --> 00:42:46,720 So I was Keaton together. 380 00:42:46,720 --> 00:42:55,330 In fact, what I should do is keep them all together just because at this moment you don't know what the difference between and and or and so on is. 381 00:42:55,330 --> 00:43:02,000 So any any complex sentence, just keep them together. 382 00:43:02,000 --> 00:43:08,090 OK. Did anyone have something different from that other than just separating the two sentences? 383 00:43:08,090 --> 00:43:14,690 And actually, you're separating the two sentences was because I misled you in the beginning, so don't knock yourself for that. 384 00:43:14,690 --> 00:43:17,210 Just saying my complete confusion. 385 00:43:17,210 --> 00:43:28,010 I can't understand why not separate study if there was some sort of dependence on the other, but there doesn't seem to be any. 386 00:43:28,010 --> 00:43:33,350 Well, what do you think about what we're doing here? Do you remember I said we've got to keep the meaning. 387 00:43:33,350 --> 00:43:42,470 The meaning has got to be the same. Whatever else we do. Now, this sentence is saying either this is true, all this is true. 388 00:43:42,470 --> 00:43:50,210 Is that right? OK, so if we separate them, so we've lost the all. 389 00:43:50,210 --> 00:43:57,440 We've just got this is true and this is true just because she did not want you 390 00:43:57,440 --> 00:44:01,940 to take and it doesn't matter whether she realises what you're doing or not, 391 00:44:01,940 --> 00:44:09,260 she still doesn't want you to take her. So they still stand independently. Regardless, they there are two independent senators. 392 00:44:09,260 --> 00:44:13,670 I completely agree you. I mean, it might be true that she did what you didn't want you to tickler, 393 00:44:13,670 --> 00:44:23,080 and it might be true that she didn't realise that you were going to take her. But what this sentence says is that either this or this. 394 00:44:23,080 --> 00:44:30,220 And that's what we have to get. I mean, OK, so so the premise of the argument is we start off with either this or this. 395 00:44:30,220 --> 00:44:38,270 Do you remember the first when we were doing the arguments on either side? 396 00:44:38,270 --> 00:44:43,430 We'll look at P or Q P. 397 00:44:43,430 --> 00:44:46,820 Sorry, not P, therefore. Q Okay. 398 00:44:46,820 --> 00:44:51,200 Do you remember that argument, P or Q not P, therefore. 399 00:44:51,200 --> 00:44:55,100 Q Okay, it's not the same here. 400 00:44:55,100 --> 00:45:03,960 What. OK. One. Okay. Now I'm not understanding why not. There's a statement which she doesn't want you to take a hit on me. 401 00:45:03,960 --> 00:45:10,590 Now, if that is the case, it doesn't matter whether she realised you wanted to see me or not. 402 00:45:10,590 --> 00:45:15,750 Her reaction was independent of her knowing. But why is that a problem? 403 00:45:15,750 --> 00:45:21,180 Because remember here, the two sentences are completely independent of each other. 404 00:45:21,180 --> 00:45:25,170 We talked about it. It's if it's it's either sunny or rainy. 405 00:45:25,170 --> 00:45:33,080 Now, that shouldn't give you. Because we could say it's either sunny or windy. 406 00:45:33,080 --> 00:45:37,170 But you can't say if it's sunny, then it's not windy. 407 00:45:37,170 --> 00:45:44,910 But we haven't said that. If then is completely different from or if then is a different logical claim. 408 00:45:44,910 --> 00:45:53,460 So what was this, again, the right time? No, no, I'm sure you're not the only person who's confused by this. 409 00:45:53,460 --> 00:45:58,430 All this says here is either this is true or this is true. 410 00:45:58,430 --> 00:46:03,150 The next phase of this. And this is this isn't true. 411 00:46:03,150 --> 00:46:09,320 Therefore, this must be. So listen to the logic again. Either this or this. 412 00:46:09,320 --> 00:46:16,660 Sorry, I ultra either this or that. Not this, therefore that. 413 00:46:16,660 --> 00:46:22,430 And it doesn't matter what this or that is. Do you see what I mean? 414 00:46:22,430 --> 00:46:29,160 So so here we sit. She didn't want you to take. Or she didn't realise what you were going to do. 415 00:46:29,160 --> 00:46:34,600 She didn't want you to tickle her. There he is. 416 00:46:34,600 --> 00:46:40,960 Well, yeah, but yeah, but hang on. This is. But nothing follows from this is is only one premiss. 417 00:46:40,960 --> 00:46:45,910 We've got to get the whole argument before anything follows. You don't have to be able to do that. 418 00:46:45,910 --> 00:46:51,280 No, I was just using that to illustrate that the all can stand between two. 419 00:46:51,280 --> 00:47:00,620 Two Independents sentence's. Doesn't matter what the sentences are, their content is irrelevant. 420 00:47:00,620 --> 00:47:06,470 OK, if you still don't understand that CMA offers a is anyone else still bothered by that? 421 00:47:06,470 --> 00:47:10,250 Put your hands up if you want me to go over that again. No. 422 00:47:10,250 --> 00:47:13,940 OK. See me afterwards. If you're still hung, goes it OK? 423 00:47:13,940 --> 00:47:22,460 Does anyone have anything else for Premiss one than this other than having divided the two up? 424 00:47:22,460 --> 00:47:29,370 No. Okay. Good. Premise two. If she didn't realise, then you obviously went about it in the wrong way. 425 00:47:29,370 --> 00:47:36,650 Does anyone have something different for that? Premise three. 426 00:47:36,650 --> 00:47:42,180 In that case, you deserve to get scratched, unless you really thought she was such a perceptive cat that she'd understand Wolf. 427 00:47:42,180 --> 00:47:49,070 Wolf, I meant roll over. I'm sorry, say that again. 428 00:47:49,070 --> 00:47:53,710 Why do you need that space, you what you do? 429 00:47:53,710 --> 00:47:58,160 You're beautiful. You were such a. Well, 430 00:47:58,160 --> 00:48:07,340 because remember that you're not evaluating the argument at this point or what you're doing is you're trying to capture the meaning of each premiss. 431 00:48:07,340 --> 00:48:14,920 If you left out in that case, you deserved to get scratched unless. 432 00:48:14,920 --> 00:48:23,770 So you just have an unless you just have unless you really thought she was such a perceptive cuttable that she and that she's not even a sentence, 433 00:48:23,770 --> 00:48:30,020 is it? In order to be a premise, it has to be a sentence. 434 00:48:30,020 --> 00:48:34,580 It might be a complex sentence, but it has to be a sentence. Yep. 435 00:48:34,580 --> 00:48:38,880 And you want to have anything different there? No good. 436 00:48:38,880 --> 00:48:43,740 You're doing very well. Premise four, if you thought that you're an idiot but you're not an idiot. 437 00:48:43,740 --> 00:48:50,920 You're just twisted. Anyone have anything different for that? 438 00:48:50,920 --> 00:49:02,080 Yeah, I think. If you thought that you were sorry, what did you have? 439 00:49:02,080 --> 00:49:06,370 OK. OK. 440 00:49:06,370 --> 00:49:12,550 At this point, I actually sympathise with your having left that out and you'll see why in a minute. 441 00:49:12,550 --> 00:49:16,570 But you shouldn't have left it out at this point because it is actually in there. 442 00:49:16,570 --> 00:49:26,780 So. So you should put it in. What are you going to say? Well, I was like because I was. 443 00:49:26,780 --> 00:49:33,290 Okay, at the moment, we're not removing irrelevancies, but perhaps when we do, we'll take this out. 444 00:49:33,290 --> 00:49:40,550 But at the moment, we'll leave it in. Okay, but but your intuition that it's irrelevant is is a good one. 445 00:49:40,550 --> 00:49:49,940 As you'll see in a minute. Okay, so there's the arguments set out, logic books style as it actually stands at the moment. 446 00:49:49,940 --> 00:49:55,040 But of course, we haven't finished at the moment because we need to remove all sorts of bits and pieces. 447 00:49:55,040 --> 00:50:02,060 So on your list of the steps to set out an object argument logic bookstall, what's the third step? 448 00:50:02,060 --> 00:50:10,190 We've identified the premises and the conclusions. What do we do next? Right. 449 00:50:10,190 --> 00:50:15,530 Actually, I'll tell you now, there aren't any suppressed premises, so so we don't have to worry with that here. 450 00:50:15,530 --> 00:50:20,460 What's the next step? Remove irrelevancies. 451 00:50:20,460 --> 00:50:24,920 Okay. Let me see how we've done that. 452 00:50:24,920 --> 00:50:28,010 Okay. What we need to do is take each premiss separately. 453 00:50:28,010 --> 00:50:34,360 Now, the nice thing about how identified the premises and the conclusions separate is we can treat each one separately. 454 00:50:34,360 --> 00:50:38,140 Now, we do not have to do them all, all at the same time. 455 00:50:38,140 --> 00:50:48,160 And that that's helps us. So let's look at Premiss one and let's remove the irrelevancies from Premiss one. 456 00:50:48,160 --> 00:50:54,460 Just get rid of any words that are not contributing to what that sentence means. 457 00:50:54,460 --> 00:51:01,140 That are just bits of fluff, if you like. Well, yes, that can go, can't it? 458 00:51:01,140 --> 00:51:08,720 I mean, that doesn't do anything. What else? Anything else? Perhaps I think perhaps I can go as well. 459 00:51:08,720 --> 00:51:19,370 Yes. OK. There's one more word I'd get rid of, actually. 460 00:51:19,370 --> 00:51:24,970 Not all, no. Tommy, who said Tommy? 461 00:51:24,970 --> 00:51:27,470 Yeah, you can get rid of Tommy. Can't you? 462 00:51:27,470 --> 00:51:33,140 So what you've got is she didn't want you to take her or she didn't realise that was what you were going to do. 463 00:51:33,140 --> 00:51:38,660 So here we are. The green is green, easier than red. Okay. 464 00:51:38,660 --> 00:51:48,530 So if we get rid of well, perhaps. And Tommy, we've got she didn't want you to tickle her or she didn't realise that's what you were going to do. 465 00:51:48,530 --> 00:51:56,090 Okay. Let's try premise two. What have you got then? 466 00:51:56,090 --> 00:52:01,480 And obviously, if she didn't realise, then I'll leave then. 467 00:52:01,480 --> 00:52:08,370 Yes. But they obviously can go concert. The obvious is just a bit of, you know, whether it was obvious or not is completely irrelevant. 468 00:52:08,370 --> 00:52:11,560 It might not have been obvious. It wouldn't really matter, would it? 469 00:52:11,560 --> 00:52:22,410 Okay, so we take out the obviously next premise three you'd take out only really unless you really thought you can certainly take out. 470 00:52:22,410 --> 00:52:35,970 Really? Yep. Not in that case, why not in that case? 471 00:52:35,970 --> 00:52:40,380 Can anyone exactly the reverse? 472 00:52:40,380 --> 00:52:45,730 It says if this if that is true, then. 473 00:52:45,730 --> 00:52:49,810 Something. So in that case is really very important. OK. 474 00:52:49,810 --> 00:52:55,480 I'll show you what I'd take out. I'd take out the lot. Yeah. 475 00:52:55,480 --> 00:53:04,860 In that case, you deserved to get scratched, because actually, if you look at the fourth premise, which I'd also take out completely. 476 00:53:04,860 --> 00:53:08,040 If you thought that you're an idiot, but you're not an idiot. You're just twisted. 477 00:53:08,040 --> 00:53:16,830 This is this is just a little insult that somebody is putting into the arguments in order to ram it home, isn't it? 478 00:53:16,830 --> 00:53:24,440 Oh, come on, you idiot. You can't not believe this. Which means what? 479 00:53:24,440 --> 00:53:29,900 Well, it means just this, doesn't it? If I say P, you're an idiot, if you don't believe it. 480 00:53:29,900 --> 00:53:33,680 What? What am I saying? Just on the whole. 481 00:53:33,680 --> 00:53:41,440 Well, yes. I'm also saying you're an idiot if I put it that way. But it so premises. 482 00:53:41,440 --> 00:53:45,280 For previous four can go completely and premise three to see that. 483 00:53:45,280 --> 00:53:50,270 Let's go back to the whole argument. 484 00:53:50,270 --> 00:53:56,590 OK, and let me read it out to you, because it's sometimes much easier if you ever find you are having trouble with an argument. 485 00:53:56,590 --> 00:54:00,400 Try reading it out loud, because that'll the tone you put on. 486 00:54:00,400 --> 00:54:05,470 It will give you a much better idea of where you're going with the logic. 487 00:54:05,470 --> 00:54:12,090 So let's read it out. Well, perhaps she didn't want you to tickler her tummy or she didn't realise that's what you were going to do. 488 00:54:12,090 --> 00:54:18,010 If she didn't realise, then you obviously went about it in the wrong way. In that case, you deserve to get scratched. 489 00:54:18,010 --> 00:54:21,620 Unless you'd really thought she was such a perceptive cat that she'd understand more fulfilment. 490 00:54:21,620 --> 00:54:25,000 Roll over. But if you thought that you're an idiot, you're not an idiot. 491 00:54:25,000 --> 00:54:32,020 You're just twisted. So if the poor thing did want you to tickle her tummy, you deserved to get scratched. 492 00:54:32,020 --> 00:54:45,380 You see this? This actually cancels itself out from here because you're saying let's let's look at the structure of it. 493 00:54:45,380 --> 00:54:51,110 P. Unless. Q Okay. 494 00:54:51,110 --> 00:54:55,910 Q Is you really thought she was such a perceptive cat that you should understand. 495 00:54:55,910 --> 00:55:03,370 Wohlforth meant roll over. Okay. If if you thought. 496 00:55:03,370 --> 00:55:11,070 So if CU. Then you're an idiot. 497 00:55:11,070 --> 00:55:16,760 If cu, then, ah. But not off. 498 00:55:16,760 --> 00:55:20,810 And you're just twisted is just an insult added on P unless. 499 00:55:20,810 --> 00:55:28,220 Q If. Q Then all but not all. Can you see how that all cancels each other out? 500 00:55:28,220 --> 00:55:33,840 P Unless. Q. If Q. 501 00:55:33,840 --> 00:55:40,910 Then all but not all. So it all just becomes. 502 00:55:40,910 --> 00:55:45,130 But again, don't worry about the figures. The letters I've put in here. 503 00:55:45,130 --> 00:55:51,990 Just do it in your own. Try reading it out and see what really counts. 504 00:55:51,990 --> 00:55:58,200 Okay, let's. So here's the argument with the irrelevancies. 505 00:55:58,200 --> 00:56:04,770 Oh, okay, one more thing. The conclusion I've just taken out the tummy again because we took out the tummy from the first premise. 506 00:56:04,770 --> 00:56:09,570 So it's in the confusion. So here's the argument with the irrelevancies removed. 507 00:56:09,570 --> 00:56:15,330 And I hope you agree it starts to look much more simple, much easier to evaluate. 508 00:56:15,330 --> 00:56:20,790 She didn't want you to tickle her or she didn't realise that's what you were going to do if she didn't realise. 509 00:56:20,790 --> 00:56:25,110 Then you went about it in the wrong way. In that case, you deserved to get scratched. 510 00:56:25,110 --> 00:56:30,180 So if the poor thing did want you to take her, you deserved to get scratched. 511 00:56:30,180 --> 00:56:42,730 But let's continue. What's the next step? So question first. It could be a conclusion. 512 00:56:42,730 --> 00:56:49,960 But don't forget, anything could be a conclusion, a conclusion is just the role that something plays in an argument. 513 00:56:49,960 --> 00:56:55,000 And in this argument, this is not playing the role of a conclusion. 514 00:56:55,000 --> 00:57:02,120 It is perhaps playing the role of a sub conclusion. But but this is the conclusion. 515 00:57:02,120 --> 00:57:08,220 Do you see him again? Remember that the conclusion is that for which you are arguing. 516 00:57:08,220 --> 00:57:11,520 And that's the only thing that makes this a conclusion. But you're absolutely right. 517 00:57:11,520 --> 00:57:20,700 That could play the role of a conclusion. OK, what's the next step? 518 00:57:20,700 --> 00:57:25,850 No. Removing consistent terms. 519 00:57:25,850 --> 00:57:30,080 OK. And cross references. OK. Inconsistent terms. 520 00:57:30,080 --> 00:57:45,800 What do we mean by inconsistent terms? Well, if we go back to that argument that we were looking at earlier. 521 00:57:45,800 --> 00:57:51,050 OK, this one. Do you see how people wanted to have another premiss in there? 522 00:57:51,050 --> 00:57:59,870 Something about industrial nations need to give emerging nations capital the capital resources or whatever it was. 523 00:57:59,870 --> 00:58:03,110 If we look runs to this one. 524 00:58:03,110 --> 00:58:12,020 If a newly emerging nation is to sustain its growth and it does not have capital resources, it will need help from industrial nations. 525 00:58:12,020 --> 00:58:15,860 What does this. It need help mean? It will need. What's. 526 00:58:15,860 --> 00:58:22,100 What's the help that is implied here? Capital Resources. 527 00:58:22,100 --> 00:58:27,980 So we're using two different terms for capital resources, aren't we? 528 00:58:27,980 --> 00:58:33,470 Here we're using capital resources and here we're using just help. 529 00:58:33,470 --> 00:58:39,030 But actually, they mean the same thing, don't they? So actually, the way this argument. 530 00:58:39,030 --> 00:58:47,190 We can reveal the argument much more carefully by saying many newly emerging nations do not have capital resources, 531 00:58:47,190 --> 00:58:50,880 capital resources are necessary for sustained growth. 532 00:58:50,880 --> 00:59:00,960 If a newly emerging nation is to sustain its growth and it does not have capital resources, it will need capital resources from industrial nations. 533 00:59:00,960 --> 00:59:09,530 Many newly emerging nations will need help, need capital resources from emerging nations. 534 00:59:09,530 --> 00:59:19,460 Could you use them? Can you use what, sorry, pregnant. What they said is the. 535 00:59:19,460 --> 00:59:23,630 Well, you couldn't use then there will be many newly emerging nations will need. 536 00:59:23,630 --> 00:59:28,100 Oh, then you mean capital resources. I see. I'm sorry. No. 537 00:59:28,100 --> 00:59:33,290 What? Well, what you're aiming to do is to reveal the structure of the argument. 538 00:59:33,290 --> 00:59:39,960 And you do that by getting rid of as many things that are distracting you from the structure of the argument as you can. 539 00:59:39,960 --> 00:59:47,750 And one of the things that's distracting you here is the fact that's two different words or phrases are used for the same thing. 540 00:59:47,750 --> 00:59:53,690 So what you do is you change them so that you're using the same word throughout the arguments. 541 00:59:53,690 --> 00:59:59,020 Now, you could just use many newly emerging nations do not have help. 542 00:59:59,020 --> 01:00:05,050 Help is necessary for sustained growth. I mean, this suggests we shouldn't use help, doesn't it? 543 01:00:05,050 --> 01:00:12,930 Okay, so let's use capital resources instead. Then it's actually a pronoun that you on the whole, you're trying to get rid of rather than put in. 544 01:00:12,930 --> 01:00:17,050 So I wouldn't use that. But I see why you wanted to. 545 01:00:17,050 --> 01:00:27,150 Yeah. OK. Do you see what I mean about removing inconsistent terms, and have I convinced you you were right? 546 01:00:27,150 --> 01:00:41,480 About what? So you need to book. 547 01:00:41,480 --> 01:00:45,290 So that should be capital resources. Yes. Yes. 548 01:00:45,290 --> 01:00:50,390 You were right about that. But I hope I was right that that wasn't a suppressed premiss. 549 01:00:50,390 --> 01:00:57,170 It's a matter of an inconsistent term needing to be removed or needing to be made consistent. 550 01:00:57,170 --> 01:01:09,910 So let's try it with this. The argument we're looking at now, I've now forgotten which side we were on. 551 01:01:09,910 --> 01:01:13,480 You know, I was just explaining what inconsistent terms are. OK? 552 01:01:13,480 --> 01:01:17,710 That's what an inconsistent term is. What about a cross reference? 553 01:01:17,710 --> 01:01:26,960 If we've got Marianne always wears jeans on Friday, she is wearing jeans. 554 01:01:26,960 --> 01:01:36,700 Forgot what the owner. What do we got there? That we could. It's like an inconsistent term. 555 01:01:36,700 --> 01:01:43,090 This is not the jeans, but she because she is referring to Marianne. 556 01:01:43,090 --> 01:01:51,310 So either make both she that would be fine, but but it might fall down elsewhere in the argument or make both Marianne. 557 01:01:51,310 --> 01:01:55,510 So remove the she and make it explicit that you mean Marianne. 558 01:01:55,510 --> 01:02:02,050 So let's try that in this premise. Now I'm just got a hint here. 559 01:02:02,050 --> 01:02:10,150 We're going to leave the she in here because throughout the argument, it's she isn't it were never introduced to the cat's name. 560 01:02:10,150 --> 01:02:16,150 We don't know what her name is and nor is she referred to as the cat at any point or anything like that. 561 01:02:16,150 --> 01:02:18,580 So in fact, this isn't an inconsistent term. 562 01:02:18,580 --> 01:02:25,100 It's consistent throughout, even though it's exactly the sort of thing that you would usually be removing. 563 01:02:25,100 --> 01:02:31,710 OK, so she didn't want you to tickler or she didn't realise that's what you were going to do. 564 01:02:31,710 --> 01:02:37,740 And you can see anything that wants you want to put up your hand if you see something that you'd like to remove. 565 01:02:37,740 --> 01:02:42,810 She didn't want you to take her or she didn't realise you were going to tickle her. 566 01:02:42,810 --> 01:02:46,320 That was what you were going to do. Stands in for. 567 01:02:46,320 --> 01:02:54,570 You were going to tickle her, doesn't it? We're not changing the meaning by it, by making those two terms consistent. 568 01:02:54,570 --> 01:03:00,690 We're just making explicit something that in the original premise is left implicit. 569 01:03:00,690 --> 01:03:06,960 And here it is. She didn't want you to tickler or she didn't realise that you were going to tickle her. 570 01:03:06,960 --> 01:03:12,810 I'd left that out. But that doesn't matter. See? Okay. Do you have any problems with that? 571 01:03:12,810 --> 01:03:21,710 No. Okay. Let's move on. What about premiss to. If she didn't realise, then you went about it in the wrong way. 572 01:03:21,710 --> 01:03:26,570 Very nearly right. The first bit was certainly right. If she didn't realise you were going to tickle her. 573 01:03:26,570 --> 01:03:29,420 Did you see you need to add this in because otherwise, 574 01:03:29,420 --> 01:03:36,650 if you didn't if she didn't realise isn't actually a sentence, is it, until you add you were going to tickle her. 575 01:03:36,650 --> 01:03:40,850 So you complete that sentence by adding that. What about the second half? 576 01:03:40,850 --> 01:03:47,000 Anyone have any ideas here? Then you were going to tickle her in the wrong way? 577 01:03:47,000 --> 01:03:54,260 Yes, something like that. Keep it as similar as possible, because all you're doing is trying to get rid of the complications. 578 01:03:54,260 --> 01:03:59,960 You're trying to make it as simple as possible so as to reveal the structure of the arguments. 579 01:03:59,960 --> 01:04:06,590 And you do that by getting rid of all the things that that are just confusing you. 580 01:04:06,590 --> 01:04:13,680 So if she didn't realise you were going to tickle her, then you were going to tickle her in the wrong way. 581 01:04:13,680 --> 01:04:19,580 Okay. Anyone any questions about that? No good premise. 582 01:04:19,580 --> 01:04:28,180 Three. Good. Well done. In that case, refers back to the previous premise, doesn't it? 583 01:04:28,180 --> 01:04:32,710 And it says if you were going to tickler in the wrong way, you deserved to get scratched. 584 01:04:32,710 --> 01:04:37,990 There's two quite separate sentences, aren't there? You are going to tickle her in the wrong way. 585 01:04:37,990 --> 01:04:43,000 And she didn't realise you were going to tickle her. Now, those are different sentences. 586 01:04:43,000 --> 01:04:50,060 You mustn't complete them because actually they matter to the arguments as very much so. 587 01:04:50,060 --> 01:04:55,600 OK. Any other questions about premies? Three. Now, let's move on. 588 01:04:55,600 --> 01:04:58,800 What about the conclusion? It's an easy one, isn't it? 589 01:04:58,800 --> 01:05:03,180 Okay. If she did want you to tell her you deserved to get scratched. 590 01:05:03,180 --> 01:05:09,420 Okay, so we take out the poor thing and put in she. Okay. 591 01:05:09,420 --> 01:05:16,650 Question. Sorry. Does the conclusion not have to stand as a sentence that makes sense in its own right? 592 01:05:16,650 --> 01:05:22,290 This is quoted me from the very beginning. Well, you didn't want you to take or how you deserve to get scratched. 593 01:05:22,290 --> 01:05:29,120 Doesn't make any sense. Yes, it does. Michael. What means what does that tell you? 594 01:05:29,120 --> 01:05:35,480 She wanted you to take you deserve it. Well, if the poor cat wanted you to tickle her. 595 01:05:35,480 --> 01:05:42,780 Oh, I see. You think, OK. If she wanted you to tickle her, you deserve to get scratched. 596 01:05:42,780 --> 01:05:47,540 Isn't isn't it? Is it OK? I see where you're going. 597 01:05:47,540 --> 01:05:52,190 It is a sentence. But your wanting. OK. Shall I tell you what you're doing. 598 01:05:52,190 --> 01:05:57,950 And I completely sympathise with what you're doing. And what's more, you are not the only person in this room who's doing it. 599 01:05:57,950 --> 01:06:03,530 You're probably the only person who's got the courage to question me on it. 600 01:06:03,530 --> 01:06:08,490 What you're doing is you're trying to put the logic in here, okay? 601 01:06:08,490 --> 01:06:16,910 You're you're trying to to make this. You're trying to make it all follow so that it makes sense as an argument. 602 01:06:16,910 --> 01:06:22,550 And what you should be doing is just trying to identify what is said here. 603 01:06:22,550 --> 01:06:29,270 What do you want to put in is this. I think so. If she did want you to tickle her. 604 01:06:29,270 --> 01:06:34,880 But she went about it in the wrong way or something like that, then you deserve to get scratches. 605 01:06:34,880 --> 01:06:43,460 Is that right? The conclusion is that there's a missing link to the premises for me. 606 01:06:43,460 --> 01:06:48,380 But. But the conclusion. Yeah, you're wrong. 607 01:06:48,380 --> 01:06:52,190 Okay. That's all I'm saying right now. You're wrong. 608 01:06:52,190 --> 01:06:59,030 And what you should do is have a look at the argument so that we can if if you're still thinking that if you still don't see what I'm saying, 609 01:06:59,030 --> 01:07:05,090 come and see me next week and I'll I'll explain again. This will convince you. 610 01:07:05,090 --> 01:07:10,160 I'm going to reveal the structure of this argument by formalising it. 611 01:07:10,160 --> 01:07:16,790 And if that doesn't convince you, nothing will. Okay. 612 01:07:16,790 --> 01:07:28,080 We're going to put it into P's and Q's and it'll be a revelation to you how putting it into P's and Q's will make it make much more sense. 613 01:07:28,080 --> 01:07:37,490 OK. What we've got to do is identify each of the constituent sentences of the argument and assign it a sentence letter. 614 01:07:37,490 --> 01:07:44,300 Now, have I got no account on this? OK. Let's look at Premiss one. 615 01:07:44,300 --> 01:07:51,470 We've got to identify the constituent sentences of that premiss and assign it a letter. 616 01:07:51,470 --> 01:07:55,340 So just looking at Premiss one. What are the constituent sentences? 617 01:07:55,340 --> 01:08:02,780 What's the first one? She didn't. 618 01:08:02,780 --> 01:08:08,560 Want you to tickle her. OK. 619 01:08:08,560 --> 01:08:21,740 And the other one, she didn't realise you were only going. 620 01:08:21,740 --> 01:08:26,870 To tickle her. Okay, well, here are two sentences. 621 01:08:26,870 --> 01:08:38,660 Let's provide them with sentence letters. I'd ask you which ones you wanted, but I want you to choose certain ones so you can choose either P or Q. 622 01:08:38,660 --> 01:08:42,680 And I'd rather not P for this one. 623 01:08:42,680 --> 01:08:48,080 Good. Okay. What? What about the next one? Q Well done. 624 01:08:48,080 --> 01:08:58,130 Good choices I have to say. Okay. So whenever we use the sentence letter P, that that means that sentence is just standing in for that sentence. 625 01:08:58,130 --> 01:09:02,810 Okay. And whenever you use the sentence that a Q that just stands in for that sentence. 626 01:09:02,810 --> 01:09:07,490 Okay. It's dead simple. Nothing magical about these things at all. 627 01:09:07,490 --> 01:09:15,520 And the reason we use capital letters from this side. This part of the alphabet that's just conventional. 628 01:09:15,520 --> 01:09:21,650 What if we use capital letters like F, G, etc.? We tend to use them for other parts of the language. 629 01:09:21,650 --> 01:09:26,390 And if we use lowercase letters like A, B, C, that's for another part of language. 630 01:09:26,390 --> 01:09:31,610 So there is a conventions about which part of language you use for which sentence letters. 631 01:09:31,610 --> 01:09:40,040 So that's why I want you to use letters from here. Okay, so Premiss one has two constituent sentences. 632 01:09:40,040 --> 01:09:43,820 She didn't want you to take her and she didn't realise you were only going to take her. 633 01:09:43,820 --> 01:09:49,370 And we've labelled them P and Q Okay. Previous to what the constituent sentences in this letter. 634 01:09:49,370 --> 01:09:55,770 This one was the first one you. She didn't realise you were only going to Tickler. 635 01:09:55,770 --> 01:10:03,350 Well, we've got that already, haven't we? So we don't need to put that down. What about the other one? 636 01:10:03,350 --> 01:10:15,200 You were going to take her in the wrong way, OK? You were going to tickle her in the wrong way. 637 01:10:15,200 --> 01:10:19,330 Okay. It needs a sentence. What should we have? Oh, good. 638 01:10:19,330 --> 01:10:26,000 Yes. Well done. You've got the idea here so you can formalise things steady easily. 639 01:10:26,000 --> 01:10:30,550 Okay. That's premise, too, isn't it? Good premise. 640 01:10:30,550 --> 01:10:34,460 Three. OK. 641 01:10:34,460 --> 01:10:39,930 You are going to take her in the wrong way. That's right. 642 01:10:39,930 --> 01:10:46,050 That's all. You deserve to get stretched. Okay. You deserve. 643 01:10:46,050 --> 01:10:50,490 To get scratched. What should we call that? 644 01:10:50,490 --> 01:10:55,140 S. Good. Okay. And conclusion. 645 01:10:55,140 --> 01:11:07,390 So if she did want you to take all her. Now, that's interesting because up here, we've got she didn't want you to take her now do it. 646 01:11:07,390 --> 01:11:13,690 I'm going to put her outside the room. No, don't. 647 01:11:13,690 --> 01:11:18,340 It is. It's very good that you question things, because that's important. 648 01:11:18,340 --> 01:11:23,590 We won't need another sentence letter because what can we use instead? Not P. 649 01:11:23,590 --> 01:11:33,970 Can't we. You don't you certainly don't need P and not P because you've got that's just in having P and the word and illogical word not. 650 01:11:33,970 --> 01:11:38,380 Okay. So if she did want you to take her you deserved to get scratched. 651 01:11:38,380 --> 01:11:42,450 Do we need anything else. That's ice already. 652 01:11:42,450 --> 01:11:52,020 Exactly. So we're here, we've got all the sentences that make up the argument tumbly, all the sentences that that constitute the argument. 653 01:11:52,020 --> 01:11:59,570 Now, I need somebody to hold this, please. Somebody come up and hold this for me. 654 01:11:59,570 --> 01:12:05,130 OK. There we are. There we have an interpretation. That's what that's called an interpretation. 655 01:12:05,130 --> 01:12:09,770 Now, previous one. What's the form of that? 656 01:12:09,770 --> 01:12:14,520 There's a logical word in that that's holding together two sentences. 657 01:12:14,520 --> 01:12:21,930 What are the sentences and what are the logical words, P or Q Good. 658 01:12:21,930 --> 01:12:34,220 That's premise one, isn't it? What's premiss to. So if. 659 01:12:34,220 --> 01:12:44,060 Is it. She didn't realise, okay, if. Q Then not therefore your confusing implication and entailment, whoever that was. 660 01:12:44,060 --> 01:12:56,210 Q Then s was it. Ah okay then the third premiss, if you were going to tickler in the wrong way, you deserve to get scratched. 661 01:12:56,210 --> 01:13:07,750 If all then s. And the conclusion is. 662 01:13:07,750 --> 01:13:13,030 If not, she she didn't want you. 663 01:13:13,030 --> 01:13:18,250 If not P, then net. 664 01:13:18,250 --> 01:13:23,890 Where's the not, where's the not. That's not wrong. 665 01:13:23,890 --> 01:13:32,380 You'll be outside too, in a minute. I said there was no not no. 666 01:13:32,380 --> 01:13:38,500 I'm putting it. I got it. I'm putting the not in front of the P because we've got P was. 667 01:13:38,500 --> 01:13:44,380 She didn't want you to tickler her. And the knot here is if she did want you to take her. 668 01:13:44,380 --> 01:13:49,630 Okay. But this says you deserve to get scratched doesn't it. 669 01:13:49,630 --> 01:13:57,180 And this says you deserve to get scratched. There's no knot snuck in here. 670 01:13:57,180 --> 01:14:05,280 I'm saying not pee, but I'm not saying not s some I mean, if you make something work, you have to put it mildly. 671 01:14:05,280 --> 01:14:10,380 No, you don't. No, because. 672 01:14:10,380 --> 01:14:14,430 Well, what do you put. Actually, if you use if you. 673 01:14:14,430 --> 01:14:21,050 You know, this is. If not P, then s woops. 674 01:14:21,050 --> 01:14:24,630 No, that's. OK. 675 01:14:24,630 --> 01:14:31,670 It's only the pea that's been negated. Not the S, not the S. 676 01:14:31,670 --> 01:14:42,660 OK. You get me confused now. 677 01:14:42,660 --> 01:14:47,010 Hold on. We've got four minutes. Go let let's finish. OK, that's fine. 678 01:14:47,010 --> 01:14:57,870 Because actually know we might need that. Stay there. OK, so this p q r s and his premise one. 679 01:14:57,870 --> 01:15:02,940 Oh I was going to make you do it like this but it's all right. You've done it. 680 01:15:02,940 --> 01:15:10,820 So. Here, so there's the whole argument, which is exactly what you've had there. 681 01:15:10,820 --> 01:15:22,280 What you've got there. Whoops. I should have put a knot there, shouldn't I? 682 01:15:22,280 --> 01:15:27,630 And I haven't. But that's my mistake. Okay. There's only a not there. 683 01:15:27,630 --> 01:15:31,400 She didn't want you to tickle her or she didn't realise you were going to Tickler. 684 01:15:31,400 --> 01:15:34,920 Okay. That's a straightforward either or isn't it either. 685 01:15:34,920 --> 01:15:37,220 This is the case or that's the case. 686 01:15:37,220 --> 01:15:42,710 Then this says, if she didn't realise that you were going to Tickler, then you were going to Tickler in the wrong way. 687 01:15:42,710 --> 01:15:47,150 Now, obviously, if you like, something's happened. She's scratched you. 688 01:15:47,150 --> 01:15:54,330 Hasn't she? And somebody said if she didn't realise you were going to tickle her, then obviously you went about it the wrong way. 689 01:15:54,330 --> 01:16:01,040 So going about it gently, puss, puss, puss, you you shoved your hand into a tummy and scratched. 690 01:16:01,040 --> 01:16:09,320 So if she didn't realise you were going to Tickler, then she and the implication there is that if she had realised, you wouldn't have got scratched. 691 01:16:09,320 --> 01:16:13,010 Is that right? That's the implication there. 692 01:16:13,010 --> 01:16:18,980 If she had realised, you wouldn't have got scratched. OK. 693 01:16:18,980 --> 01:16:25,760 No, no, we're not talking about one thing here at all. No, but the premises are separate. 694 01:16:25,760 --> 01:16:31,490 The premises are completely separate. We're looking at the meaning of each one separately. 695 01:16:31,490 --> 01:16:38,450 OK, so this one the implication is if she had realised that, then you wouldn't have got scratched. 696 01:16:38,450 --> 01:16:45,710 If you're going to titular in the wrong way, you you deserve to get scratched, showcases the question of desert coming in here. 697 01:16:45,710 --> 01:16:55,970 And so the conclusion is, if she did want you to tickle her and you went about it in the wrong way, then you deserve to get scratched. 698 01:16:55,970 --> 01:17:02,990 So the poor thing was longing for you to take her. And what she did when you did Tickler was scratch you. 699 01:17:02,990 --> 01:17:08,830 Well, why did that happen? Because you went about it in the wrong way. 700 01:17:08,830 --> 01:17:14,250 Have we got to have a horse still standing? 701 01:17:14,250 --> 01:17:18,290 Right. It makes sense without the premises. Is that right? 702 01:17:18,290 --> 01:17:22,220 I'm going to shut you up now. OK, let's. I did. 703 01:17:22,220 --> 01:17:25,430 I don't want to leave on a note of confusion. 704 01:17:25,430 --> 01:17:34,440 The important thing is that what we've done today is we've taken an argument that you looked at and when you looked at it, you want her, didn't you? 705 01:17:34,440 --> 01:17:40,220 OK, well, I said we're going to test it out. Logic bookstall of all we're going to do is identify the argument. 706 01:17:40,220 --> 01:17:44,030 We're going to analyse the argument, reveal its structure. 707 01:17:44,030 --> 01:17:48,530 So what we've done is we've taken the argument, we identified the conclusion of the argument. 708 01:17:48,530 --> 01:17:53,870 We all did that fairly easily. We identified each premise. We all did that fairly easily. 709 01:17:53,870 --> 01:17:57,770 Yes. Okay. We looked for suppressed premises. 710 01:17:57,770 --> 01:18:05,180 But I told you there weren't any. So. So we didn't bother with that one. Then we went through each premise and we removed inconsistent terms, 711 01:18:05,180 --> 01:18:13,500 cross references and irrelevancies and revealed the arguments, which might be a very bad argument for all we know. 712 01:18:13,500 --> 01:18:23,030 But but we revealed the argument that was there. What we didn't do is try and impose the argument we would have made because it 713 01:18:23,030 --> 01:18:28,310 would have been a better one on the argument that we were trying to analyse. 714 01:18:28,310 --> 01:18:32,660 Are you with me? So all we've done is revealed the arguments here. 715 01:18:32,660 --> 01:18:37,940 We've revealed the structure. We've even got it down to a piece, cues, R's and S's. 716 01:18:37,940 --> 01:18:44,900 Now, what you should do for for next week is take one of the arguments that you found this week and try and do that. 717 01:18:44,900 --> 01:18:52,880 And an awful lot of that's going to be removing irrelevancies, cross references and things like that and adding suppressed premises. 718 01:18:52,880 --> 01:18:57,770 But it'll give you practise in doing it. And don't forget, this is the important thing. 719 01:18:57,770 --> 01:19:03,050 You can apply this methodology either to somebody else's arguments, which is what we've been doing here. 720 01:19:03,050 --> 01:19:13,550 And what you will do if you look at arguments from the newspaper, all you can apply it to your own arguments and you'll think of something for which 721 01:19:13,550 --> 01:19:23,510 you often argue climate change or something like that or I don't know what's up. 722 01:19:23,510 --> 01:19:28,790 Okay, that's a good one. That'll do. Anyway, find something for which you like to argue in the pub, 723 01:19:28,790 --> 01:19:38,090 write down your conclusion and write down your premises and try and make the argument, the argument you actually give. 724 01:19:38,090 --> 01:19:44,600 So then when we start evaluating arguments, we can look at it. But you will have identified your own arguments and set it out. 725 01:19:44,600 --> 01:19:46,340 Logic book style, 726 01:19:46,340 --> 01:19:55,100 because people often do do that with their own arguments and therefore don't see that they're missing out a huge premiss or that this is happening, 727 01:19:55,100 --> 01:19:59,030 all that's happening or whatever. Okay, so your homework for this week, 728 01:19:59,030 --> 01:20:02,960 either take the arguments you found last week and set them out logic bookstall or 729 01:20:02,960 --> 01:20:08,930 choose a client claim you'd like to make and see if you can set it out as an argument, 730 01:20:08,930 --> 01:20:21,136 logic book style. Okay, cool. I'm exhausted.