- Thu Nov 05, 2015 3:51 pm
#20503
lr bible page 495: For the problem "People who are good at playing the game drackery..."
For choice A: "People with long legs make good runners. Everyone in Daryl's family has long legs. Therefore, Daryl would make a good runner". --> The bible says the reasoning is valid here since we assume that the term "family" includes Daryl. (But either way we took a whole and assumed the part was included)
However, on page 506 of the bible we see this problem "The student body at this university takes courses in a wide range of disciplines..."
And for this problem, the reasoning is invalid due to a whole to part flaw.
1)But just as in the first case isn't Miriam just as a part of the student body, just as Daryl is a part of the "family" in all respects? Or is the reasoning for the second example invalid because it doesn't say "every member of the student body", and so Miriam is not necessarily included in the whole unless we specify exactly that EVERY member of the student body takes courses in a wide range of disciplines, as in the first example given (i.e. the first example references that EVERYONE in Daryl's family had long legs, so we knew Daryl was part of this group).
2)And so with the term "everyone" used in the example on 506,would the reasoning there be valid, and consequently choice a correct?
3)What is the difference between these two examples that makes one valid and the other not? (Maybe "student body" is more of an entity whereas saying "every member of Daryl's family" is still referring not to a whole entity but parts of a group. And thus you are still going from part to part in the first example and entity to part as in the second. Is this it?)
I hope my confusion makes sense, because I do not want to mess something so silly as this up in the future! Thanks in advance!
For choice A: "People with long legs make good runners. Everyone in Daryl's family has long legs. Therefore, Daryl would make a good runner". --> The bible says the reasoning is valid here since we assume that the term "family" includes Daryl. (But either way we took a whole and assumed the part was included)
However, on page 506 of the bible we see this problem "The student body at this university takes courses in a wide range of disciplines..."
And for this problem, the reasoning is invalid due to a whole to part flaw.
1)But just as in the first case isn't Miriam just as a part of the student body, just as Daryl is a part of the "family" in all respects? Or is the reasoning for the second example invalid because it doesn't say "every member of the student body", and so Miriam is not necessarily included in the whole unless we specify exactly that EVERY member of the student body takes courses in a wide range of disciplines, as in the first example given (i.e. the first example references that EVERYONE in Daryl's family had long legs, so we knew Daryl was part of this group).
2)And so with the term "everyone" used in the example on 506,would the reasoning there be valid, and consequently choice a correct?
3)What is the difference between these two examples that makes one valid and the other not? (Maybe "student body" is more of an entity whereas saying "every member of Daryl's family" is still referring not to a whole entity but parts of a group. And thus you are still going from part to part in the first example and entity to part as in the second. Is this it?)
I hope my confusion makes sense, because I do not want to mess something so silly as this up in the future! Thanks in advance!