- Wed Jan 10, 2018 4:54 pm
#42786
Hello!
As I'm reviewing formal logic, I understand most of the rules but I'm confused about the inferences made, all of which I got wrong. These come from page 436 from the Logic Reasoning Bible, chapter 13. For example, number 1:
Some As are Bs
No Bs are Cs
All Cs are Ds
I diagrammed this correctly to be: A B C D
however, when I went to simplify it, I saw the some train and reduced the work to: A (not)C D
From there, I used the some train again, and reduced it to: A D,
but from the answer key I see 2 separate inferneces made of A (not) C & . D (not) B
This happened with me throughout the drill, so I'm confused.. are we not trying to reduce it down? How are we to know to stop making inferences from A to C and then go from D to B?
As I'm reviewing formal logic, I understand most of the rules but I'm confused about the inferences made, all of which I got wrong. These come from page 436 from the Logic Reasoning Bible, chapter 13. For example, number 1:
Some As are Bs
No Bs are Cs
All Cs are Ds
I diagrammed this correctly to be: A B C D
however, when I went to simplify it, I saw the some train and reduced the work to: A (not)C D
From there, I used the some train again, and reduced it to: A D,
but from the answer key I see 2 separate inferneces made of A (not) C & . D (not) B
This happened with me throughout the drill, so I'm confused.. are we not trying to reduce it down? How are we to know to stop making inferences from A to C and then go from D to B?