What is Logic?
Chapter 1. What is Logic? Matthew Knachel
🧭 Overview
🧠 One-sentence thesis
Logic is the discipline that distinguishes good reasoning from bad by formulating precise standards for evaluating arguments, not by measuring persuasiveness but by assessing correctness according to logical rules.
📌 Key points (3–5)
- What logic evaluates: arguments—sets of propositions where premises are supposed to support a conclusion—not persuasive effectiveness.
- Core distinction: good reasoning means logically correct reasoning, not effective persuasion; bad reasoning can be highly persuasive (e.g., Hitler's arguments).
- Fundamental unit: the argument, consisting of premises (reasons) and a conclusion (the claim being supported).
- Common confusion: don't confuse propositions (things that can be true/false, expressed by declarative sentences) with questions or commands, which cannot be true or false.
- Why it matters: logic is essential to philosophy because philosophers exchange arguments to answer deep questions, and logical developments have revolutionized philosophical inquiry.
🎯 What logic does
🎯 The core task
Logic is the discipline that aims to distinguish good reasoning from bad.
- Reasoning involves making claims and backing them up with reasons, drawing inferences from evidence, acting according to beliefs.
- Reasoning can be done well or badly, correctly or incorrectly.
- Logic provides the rules and techniques to tell the difference.
⚖️ Correctness vs effectiveness
- Correctness = conforming to logical rules.
- Effectiveness = persuasiveness, ability to convince people.
- These are not the same: bad reasoning is often extremely persuasive.
Example: Hitler persuaded an entire nation with arguments that were effective but not logically correct. His reasoning failed logical standards, and he relied on threats, emotional manipulation, and unsupported assertions—rhetorical tricks, not sound reasoning.
- Don't confuse: persuasive power with logical validity. The standard in logic is correctness, not how many people believe the conclusion.
🧰 What a logic is
A logic = a set of rules and techniques for distinguishing good reasoning from bad.
- There are many types of reasoning and many approaches to evaluating them, so we speak of "logic" (the enterprise) and "logics" (particular systems).
- A logic must:
- Formulate precise standards for evaluating reasoning.
- Develop methods for applying those standards to specific instances.
🧱 Basic building blocks
🧱 Propositions
Propositions = the things we claim, state, assert; the kinds of things that can be true or false.
- Propositions are expressed by declarative sentences.
- Examples: "the Earth revolves around the Sun," "reality is an unchanging Absolute," "it is wrong to eat meat."
- Not propositions: interrogative sentences (questions like "Is it raining?") and imperative sentences (commands like "Don't drink kerosene") do not express propositions because they cannot be true or false.
Don't confuse propositions with sentences:
- A single proposition can be expressed by different sentences: "It's raining" (English) and "es regnet" (German) express the same proposition.
- "John loves Mary" and "Mary is loved by John" express the same proposition in different ways.
📦 Arguments
Argument = a set of propositions, one of which (the conclusion) is (supposed to be) supported by the others (the premises).
- The conclusion is the claim being backed up.
- The premises are the reasons given to support it.
- The parenthetical "supposed to be" allows for bad arguments: premises may fail to support the conclusion.
- Roughly: a good argument's premises actually support the conclusion; a bad argument's premises fail to do so.
Example passage:
"You shouldn't eat at McDonald's. Why? First of all, because they pay their workers very low wages. Second, the animals that provide their meat are raised in deplorable conditions. Finally, the food is extremely unhealthy."
- Conclusion: You shouldn't eat at McDonald's.
- Premises: low wages, deplorable animal conditions, unhealthy food.
🔍 Premise and conclusion markers
- Premise markers: "because," "since," "for"—signal that a premise is being stated.
- Conclusion markers: "therefore," "consequently," "thus," "it follows that," "which implies that"—signal that the conclusion is about to follow.
- The symbol "∴" is shorthand for "therefore."
🔬 Analyzing arguments
🔬 Explication
- Explication = stating explicitly the premises and conclusion of an argument.
- Format: list declarative sentences (propositions), separated by a line, with the conclusion after "∴".
Example explication:
- McDonald's pays their workers very low wages.
- The animals that provide McDonald's meat are raised in deplorable conditions.
- McDonald's food is very unhealthy. ∴ You shouldn't eat at McDonald's.
✏️ Paraphrasing
- Sometimes the passage must be rewritten so every sentence expresses a proposition.
- Interrogative sentences (questions) must be converted to declarative form.
Example: "And yet does it not also display an astonishing degree of order?" is a rhetorical question; paraphrase as "The universe displays an astonishing degree of order."
- If one sentence expresses multiple propositions, separate them into distinct premises.
🕳️ Enthymemes and tacit premises
Enthymeme = an argumentative passage that leaves certain propositions unstated.
- Sometimes a premise is implicit—not stated but necessary for the argument to work.
- How to identify tacit premises: look for a claim that bridges the gap between stated premises and the conclusion; if it's false, it undermines the argument.
Example:
"There cannot be an all-loving God, because so many innocent people all over the world are suffering."
- Stated premise: Many innocent people are suffering.
- Tacit premise: An all-loving God would not allow innocent people to suffer.
- Conclusion: There cannot be an all-loving God.
Why premises are left tacit:
- Often they are controversial and the arguer prefers not to defend them.
- Sometimes they are so widely accepted that stating them would be redundant.
Don't confuse: leaving out a premise for convenience vs leaving it out because it's controversial. Drawing out tacit premises forces a more robust discussion.
🗺️ Diagramming arguments
🗺️ Why diagram
- Diagrams depict relationships among premises and conclusion.
- Helpful for understanding how arguments work and for critical engagement.
- Use circled numbers for propositions and arrows for support relationships.
🔗 Independent premises
- Independent premises = each premise supports the conclusion on its own, without help from others.
- Mark: each premise still provides a reason even if the other were false.
Example:
"America's invasion of Iraq was an act of aggression, not self-defense. In addition, it was unreasonable to expect that the benefits would outweigh the horrors. Therefore, the Iraq War was not a just war."
- Propositions ① and ② each independently support ③.
- Diagram: two separate arrows from ① and ② pointing to ③.
Implication: Undermining one independent premise does not completely remove support for the conclusion, because the other premise still provides some support.
🔗 Intermediate premises
- Sometimes a premise supports the conclusion indirectly by supporting another premise first.
Example:
"Poets are mere 'imitators' whose works obscure the truth; hence, they have a corrupting influence on the souls of citizens. Poets should therefore be banned from the ideal city-state."
- ① supports ②, and ② supports ③.
- Diagram: ① → ② → ③.
Implication: Anything contrary to ① leaves ② without support; anything contrary to ② cuts off support for ③.
🔗 Joint premises
- Joint premises = premises that must work together to support a claim; neither provides support on its own.
- Indicate with brackets in the diagram.
Example:
"If true artificial intelligence is possible, then one must be able to program a computer to be conscious. But it's impossible to program consciousness. Therefore, true artificial intelligence is impossible."
- ① and ② work together to support ③.
- Diagram: ① and ② bracketed together, with a single arrow to ③.
Implication: Undermining either joint premise removes all support for the conclusion.
🧩 Complex example
Argument about numbers:
"Numbers are either abstract or concrete objects. They cannot be concrete objects because they don't have a location in space and they don't interact causally with other objects. Therefore, numbers are abstract objects."
- Conclusion: ⑤ Numbers are abstract objects.
- ① and ② work together (joint premises) to support ⑤.
- ③ and ④ independently support ②.
- Diagram: ③ and ④ with separate arrows to ②; ① and ② bracketed together with arrow to ⑤.
🧠 Logic and philosophy
🧠 The central philosophical question
- At the heart of logic: What makes a good argument?
- Equivalent questions: What is it for claims to provide support for another claim? When are we justified in drawing inferences?
- Logicians have developed many logical systems, covering different argument types and applying different principles.
🔧 Logic as a tool
- Logic has wide application beyond philosophy: mathematics (proving theorems), computer science (programming), linguistics (modeling language structure).
- Because of its formal/mathematical sophistication, logic occupies a unique place in philosophy curricula.
- A logic class is often unlike other philosophy classes: less time on "big questions," more on learning logical formalisms.
🔧 Three ways logic is useful to philosophers
| Use | Description |
|---|---|
| Essential tool | Philosophy progresses by exchanging arguments; philosophers must know what makes good arguments. |
| Altered the conversation | Formal systems developed by logicians have opened new avenues of inquiry and sparked a revolution in 20th-century philosophy; no topic (metaphysics, ethics, epistemology) was untouched. |
| Source of questions | Logic itself generates philosophical questions (philosophy of logic): What does it mean for logic to be "formal"? Should logic be bivalent (every proposition true or false)? Can we accept multiple incompatible logics (logical pluralism)? |
🌀 Philosophy of logic
- Bivalence: traditionally, every proposition is either true or false.
- Vagueness problem: natural language contains vague terms (e.g., "bald") with unclear boundaries; some cases seem neither true nor false.
- Non-bivalent logics: some logicians add a third truth-value ("neither," "undetermined") or infinite degrees of truth ("fuzzy logic").
- Open question: Are these non-traditional logics wrong? Are traditionalists wrong? Can we be pluralists and accept different logics depending on usefulness?
Don't confuse: logic as a tool for evaluating arguments vs philosophy of logic, which asks deeper questions about the nature and foundations of logical systems themselves.