What is an Argument?
An argument is a set of premises (things you assume) that lead to a conclusion (what you claim follows).
Premises + Conclusion = Argument
A Simple Example
= “it rains”
= “the ground gets wet”
Premise 1: — “If it rains, the ground gets wet”
Premise 2: — “It rained”
Conclusion: — “The ground is wet”
This feels right. But how do we know for sure?
What Makes an Argument Valid?
An argument is valid if: whenever ALL premises are true, the conclusion is ALSO true.
It’s about the structure, not whether the premises are actually true in real life.
How to Check Validity
Use a truth table:
- Find all rows where every premise is true
- Check if the conclusion is also true in those rows
- If yes in ALL such rows → valid
If there’s even ONE row where all premises are true but the conclusion is false → invalid
Common Valid Forms
These are patterns that always work. Once you recognize them, you don’t need a truth table.
1. Modus Ponens
If p then q. p happened. So q happened.
- = “it rains”
- = “I bring an umbrella”
“If it rains, I bring an umbrella. It rained. So I brought an umbrella.”
2. Modus Tollens
If p then q. q didn’t happen. So p didn’t happen.
- = “it rains”
- = “I bring an umbrella”
“If it rains, I bring an umbrella. I didn’t bring an umbrella. So it didn’t rain.”
3. Hypothetical Syllogism
If p leads to q, and q leads to r, then p leads to r.
- = “I oversleep”
- = “I miss the bus”
- = “I’m late to work”
“If I oversleep, I miss the bus. If I miss the bus, I’m late to work. So if I oversleep, I’m late to work.”
4. Disjunctive Syllogism
Either p or q. p is false. So q must be true.
- = “he’s at home”
- = “he’s at work”
“He’s either at home or at work. He’s not at home. So he’s at work.”
Common Fallacies
These look valid but aren’t. Don’t fall for them.
1. Affirming the Consequent
✗ INVALID
If p then q. q happened. So p happened? No — q could have happened for other reasons.
- = “it rains”
- = “the ground is wet”
“If it rains, the ground is wet. The ground is wet. So it rained.” ← WRONG
The ground could be wet from a sprinkler.
2. Denying the Antecedent
✗ INVALID
If p then q. p didn’t happen. So q didn’t happen? No — q could still happen for other reasons.
- = “it rains”
- = “the ground is wet”
“If it rains, the ground is wet. It didn’t rain. So the ground isn’t wet.” ← WRONG
Sprinkler again.
Valid vs Sound
Valid = the logic is correct. IF the premises were true, the conclusion would HAVE to follow.
Sound = valid + the premises are actually true in real life.
Example of valid but NOT sound:
- = “you eat an apple a day”
- = “you never get sick”
“If you eat an apple a day, you never get sick. You eat an apple a day. So you never get sick.”
The logic is perfect — it’s modus ponens. If the first statement were true, the conclusion would follow.
But the first statement is false in real life. Eating apples doesn’t make you immune to sickness.
So: Valid structure, but not sound because we started with a lie.
Why does this matter?
You can have flawless logic and still be wrong — if you start with bad premises.
Valid = your reasoning is correct. Sound = your reasoning is correct AND your starting points are true.
Summary
| Form | Pattern | Valid? |
|---|---|---|
| Modus Ponens | ✓ | |
| Modus Tollens | ✓ | |
| Hypothetical Syllogism | ✓ | |
| Disjunctive Syllogism | ✓ | |
| Affirming the Consequent | ✗ | |
| Denying the Antecedent | ✗ |