CATEGORICAL
SYLLOGISM
INTRODUCTION
       the mere analysis of the
       of the S and P or direct
       observation will not
       disclose their judgment.
       The mind compares the
       two certain ideas with
       the third idea to which is
       familiar
INTRODUCTION
   IDEA 1       IDEA 2       IDEA 3
                         
            
INTRODUCTION
   IDEA 1   IDEA 2        IDEA 3
                     
                     OR
                     
INTRODUCTION
      • MEDIATE INFERENCE –
        we derive conclusion
        from two or more
        premise
      • MEDIATION of
        the THIRD IDEA
MEDIATE INFERENCE
 a process of the mind in which from the
 agreement or disagreement of 2 ideas with a third
 idea we infer their agreement or disagreement
 with each other
EXAMPLE
         All animal is mortal.
      But every dog is an animal.
    Therefore, every dog is mortal.
THE SYLLOGISM
          IDEA : TERM
    JUDGEMENT : PROPOSITION
      MEDIATE INFERENCE :
        ARGUMENTATION
            THE SYLLOGISM
• ARGUMENTATION – a
  discourse which
  logically deduces one
  proposition from the
  others
SYLLOGISM
 An argumentation in which, from two known
 propositions that contain a common idea, and one
 at least of which is universal, a third proposition,
 different from the two propositions, follow with
 necessity.
 (Timbreza, 1992)
SYLLOGISM
 is a kind of logical argument in which one
 proposition (the conclusion) is inferred from
 two or more others (the premises) of a certain
 form.
 (Merriam-Webster Dictionary)
CATEGORICAL SYLLOGISM
   is a piece of deductive, mediate
   inference which consists of three
   categorical propositions, the first two
   which are premises and the third is the
   conclusion
   It contains exactly three terms, each of
   which occurs in exactly two of the
   constituent propositions.
EXAMPLE
        All fish swim.
          (Major Premise)
    Every shark is a fish.
          (Minor Premise)
    Therefore every shark
            swim.
           (Conclusion)
STRUCTURES OF A CATEGORICAL
        SYLLOGISM
   Three Propositions:            Three terms:
   1.        Major Premise   1.   Major term (P)
   2. Minor Premise          2. Minor term (S)
        3.    Conclusion     3. Middle term (M)
         THREE PROPOSITIONS
MAJOR PREMISE:                 MINOR PREMISE:
  is the one wherein the         is the one wherein the minor
  major term (P) is compared     term (S) is compared to the
  to the middle term (M)         middle term (M)
                                 less universal class
  universal class
  not challenged and
  assumed to be true
THREE PROPOSITIONS
CONCLUSION:
 is the new truth arrived at , the result of
 reasoning, wherein the agreement or
 disagreement between the minor term (S) and
 the major term (P) is enunciated or expressed.
               THREE TERMS
MAJOR TERM (P):            MINOR TERM (S):
• compared to the          • compared to the
  middle term in a major     middle term in a minor
  premise                    premise
• more universal class
                           • less universal class
• predicate of the
  conclusion               • subject of the
                             conclusion
THREE TERMS
MIDDLE TERM:
 term of comparison
 appears twice in the premise but
 NEVER in the conclusion
EXAMPLE
  All fish (M) are sea creatues (P)
           (Major Premise)
    Every shark (S) s a fish (M)
           (Minor Premise)
  Therefore every shark (S) are sea
             creatures (P)
             (Conclusion)
EXERCISE
  _________ All mammals (_) have lungs (_).
  _________ All whales (_) have lungs (_).
  _________ Therefore, all whales (_) are
                mammals(_).
EXERCISE
   A land and water dwellers are called
   amphibians.
   All salamanders are land and water
   dwellers.
   All salamanders are amphibians.
TO SUMMARIZE
      All M is P – Major premise
     All is S is M – Minor premise
   Therefore, all S is P - Conclusion
General Axioms (Principles)
     of the Syllogism
           Prepared by:
         Agnes Baculi, Rn
      Geinah R. Quiñones, RN
1. Principle of Reciprocal Identity
   If two terms agree (or are identical)
   with a third term, then they are
   identical with each other.
      M is P.         M agrees with P.
      S is M.         S agrees with M.
      ∴ S is P.       ∴ S agrees with P.
Example:
   A dog is an animal.
   A hound is a dog.
   ∴ a hound is an animal.
2. Principle of Reciprocal Non-Identity
    If two terms, one of which is identical
    with a third, but the other of which is
    not, then they are not identical with
    each other.
        P is M.
                             P agrees with M.
      S is not M.       S does not agree with M.
      ∴ S is not P.     ∴ S does not agree with P.
Example:
 Nuclear-powered submarines are not commercial vessels.
 All nuclear-powered submarines are warships.
 ∴ warships are not commercial vessels.
3. Dictum de Omni (The Law of All)
  What is affirmed of a logical class may also
  be affirmed of its logical member.
                     P
                     M
                     S
Formula:
 1. P is affirmed of M.
 But M is affirmed of S.
 Hence, P may also be affirmed of S.
 2. Circle M is inside circle P.
 But circle S in inside circle M.
 Therefore, circle S is inside circle P.
Formula:
 3. M is part of P.
 But S is a part of M.
 Therefore, S is also a part of P.
 4. Circle P contains circle M.
 But circle M contains circle S.
 Therefore, circle P also contains circle S.
Example:
All terriers are mammals.
Terriers are dogs.
Therefore, all dogs are mammals.
                     Mammals
                      Dogs
                      Terrier
4. Dictum de Nullo (The Law of None)
  What is denied of a logical class is also
  denied of its logical member.
  What is denied universally of a term is
  also denied of each of all referents of
  that term.
Example:
Graduate students are voters.
No person under eighteen years of age is a
 voter.
Therefore, graduate students are not under
  eighteen years of age.
             Voters
                             Under
                            eighteen
            Graduate        years of
            students
                               age
     Eight General Syllogistic Rules
1.    There must be only three terms in the syllogism.
2. Neither the major nor the minor term may be
   distributed in the conclusion, if it is undistributed in
   the premises.
3.    The middle term must not appear in the conclusion.
4. The middle term must be distributed at least once
   in the premises.
 Eight General Syllogistic Rules
5. Only an affirmative conclusion can be drawn from
   two affirmative premises.
6. No conclusion can be drawn from two negative
   premises.
7. If one premise is particular, the conclusion must also
   be particular; if one premise is negative, the
   conclusion must be negative.
8. No conclusion can be drawn from two particular
   premises.
Rule 1: There must be only three
    terms in the syllogism.
  -Minor Term (S)
  -Major Term (P)
  -Middle Term (M)
     Fallacy of Four Terms
 occurs when a syllogism has four (or
more) terms rather than the requisite
three.
             All M is P.
             All S is R.
             ∴ all S is P.
Example:
All academicians are egotists.
Susan is someone who works in a university.
Therefore, Susan is an egotist.
Fallacy of Ambiguous Middle
Sound travels very fast.
His knowledge of law is sound.
Therefore, his knowledge of law travels
 very fast.
  Rule 2: Neither the major nor the minor
term may be distributed in the conclusion,
   if it is undistributed in the premises.
a) Major term must not become universal in the
   conclusion if it is only particular in the major
   premise.
b) Minor term must not become universal in the
   conclusion if it is only particular in the minor
   premise.
 Fallacy of Illicit Process
a) Fallacy of Illicit Major
b) Fallacy of Illicit Minor
    Fallacy of Illicit Major
Committed if and only if the major
term (P) becomes universal in the
conclusion while it is only particular in
the major premise.
Example:
All Texans are Americans.
No Californians are Texans.
Therefore, no Californians are Americans.
        Mu           Pp
A- All Texans are Americans.
          Su              Mu
E- No Californians are Texans.
                     Su             Pu
E- Therefore, no Californians are Americans.
Fallacy of Illicit Minor
Minor term becomes universal in
the conclusion while it is only
particular (undistributed) in the
minor premise.
Example:
All animal rights activists are vegans.
All animal rights activists are humans.
Therefore, all humans are vegans.
               Mu                     Pp
A- All animal rights activists are vegans.
               Mu                     Sp
A- All animal rights activists are humans.
                    Su           Pu
A- Therefore, all humans are vegans.
Rule 3: The middle term must not
    appear in the conclusion.
All tables have four legs
All dogs have four legs
Therefore all dogs and tables have four legs.
 Rule 4: The middle term must be
  distributed at least once in the
             premises.
Middle term must be used as least once as
universal in any of the premises.
It must be shown in the premises that at
least all members or referents of the
middle term are identical or not identical
with all the members or referents of either
the minor or the major term.
Example:
Contradictories are opposites.
Black and white are opposites.
∴ black and white are contradictories.
      Pu              Mp
Contradictories are opposites.
       Su             Mp
Black and white are opposites.
            Su              Pp
∴ black and white are contradictories.
Fallacy of Undistributed Middle
  Arises when the middle term is not
  used at least once as universal in the
  premises.
RULES ON PREMISES
5. Only an affirmative conclusion can be
   drawn from affirmative premises
• The major term (P) and minor term (S) of both affirmative
  premises agree with the middle term.
• Hence, the conclusion must express agreement between the
  major term (P) and minor term (S).
                     EXAMPLE
Every carnivore is a meat-eater.
          (affirmative)
      A lion is a carnivore.
          (affirmative)
Therefore, a Lion is a meat-eater.
          (affirmative)
RULES ON PREMISES
6.   No conclusion can be drawn from two
     negative premises
• If both the premises are negative, major term (P)
  and the minor term (S) disagree with the middle
  term, then the middle term cannot establish any
  relation between the major term (P) and the
  minor term (S)
FALLACY OF TWO NEGATIVES
          No vegetables are fruits.
                  (negative)
     All tomatoes are not vegetables.
                  (negative)
   Therefore, all tomatoes are not fruits.
                  (negative)
RULES ON PREMISES
7. If one premise is particular, the conclusion must
   be particular; if the one premise is negative the
   conclusion must be negative.
•   Only a portion of either the minor term (S) or
    major term (P) referents share something in
    common with the middle term.
FALLACY OF ILLICIT MINOR
           All Spartans are Greek.
        Some warriors are Spartans.
                 (particular)
      Therefore, all warriors are Greek.
EXAMPLE
         All Spartans are Greek.
      Some warriors are Spartans.
   Therefore, some warriors are Greek.
RULES ON PREMISES
  if one of the premises is negative, then
  neither agrees with the middle term
  therefore they don’t agree with each other
  negative propostion:
                  S is not P
EXAMPLE
          No cube is round.
              (negative)
           A box is a cube.
     Therefore a box is not round.
              (negative)
RULES ON PREMISES
8. No conclusion can be drawn from two particular
   premises.
• THREE POSSIBILITIES:
  a) either both are affirmative
  b) both are negative
  c) one is affirmative and the other is
     negative
THREE POSSIBILITIES
a) either both are affirmative
 • if both premises are particular affirmative then
   all four terms will be particular.
b) if both premises are particular negative no
  conclusion can be made.
THREE POSSIBILITIES
   c) if either of the particular
     premises is negative then the
     syllogism will contain either a
     fallacy of illicit major or
     undistributed middle
FALLACY OF ILLICIT MAJOR
    Some priests are Dominicans.
    Some teachers are not priests.
   Therefore, some teachers are not
               Dominicans.
FALLACY OF UNDISTRIBUTED
MIDDLE
         Some elephants are big.
            Some boys are big.
    Therefore some boys are elephants.
Figures and Moods of the
  Categorical Syllogism
             Figure
Proper arrangement (position) of the
middle term (M) with respect to the
major term (P) and the minor term (S)
in the premises.
      4 Syllogistic Figures
   1st    M-p   p-M   M-p     p-M
Premise
   2nd    s-M   s-M   M-s     M-s
Premise
 Figure    1     2     3       4
   Figure 1: The middle term is the
  subject of the major premise and
 the predicate of the minor premise
      Some people are difficult to get along with.
M-p
      All Americans are people.
s-M
      Therefore, some Americans are difficult to get
S-P   along with.
      Figure 2: The middle term is the
        predicate of both premises.
p-M      Registered students are members of this class.
s-M      John is a member of this class.
S-P      Therefore, John is a registered student.
             Mood
Proper arrangement of the premises
according to quantity and quality.
  AAAA    EEEE     IIII   OOOO
  AEIO    AEIO    AEIO     AEIO
Valid Moods of the Four Figures
 Figure 1   AAA , EAE, AII, EIO
 Figure 2   EAE, AEE, EIO, AOO
 Figure 3   AAI, EAO, IAI, AII, OAO, EIO
 Figure 4   AAI, AEE, IAI, EAO, EIO
     Example:
A- All textbooks are books intended for careful
  study.
I- Some reference books are intended for
  careful study.
I-     Therefore,   some   reference   books   are
     textbooks.
Example:
A- All criminal actions are wicked deeds.
A- All prosecutions for murder are criminal
  actions.
A- Therefore, all prosecutions for murder are
  wicked deeds.