Logic and critical thinking are lost arts in American public
discourse, and most public education never broaches the topic. The
following
article offers college-level knowledge on logic and critical thinking.
Logic and critical thinking are lost arts in American public discourse,
and
much of American private life, because public education never really
broaches
the topic.
The following article offers college-level knowledge on logic and
critical
thinking.
Deductive Reasoning
The most common method of building an argument is deductive reasoning,
where a
syllogism is constructed using a major premise, a minor premise and a
conclusion.
In most cases, the major premise is the all-encompassing, worldview
idea, while
the minor premise is the idea specific to a given argument. The
conclusion then
naturally follows from the two premises.
For example, in an essay arguing that handguns should be outlawed, the
syllogism might look like this:
Major Premise: That which is potentially dangerous should be outlawed.
Minor Premise: Handguns are potentially dangerous.
Conclusion: Handguns should be outlawed.
When evaluating the merits of a deductive syllogism, the critical
thinker needs
to ask if an argument is sound. That is, are the premises true (do you
agree?)
and are the premises valid (do they relate to each other?).
If the syllogism is either false or invalid, then the argument is
unsound.