14/15. Got caught on the very last one, the water one.
Same here.
I found it painful to click invalid on "therefore all kangaroos are marsupials" ... I wanted to say ... "but, but, they are!"
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14/15. Got caught on the very last one, the water one.
I scored 100% on both tests. Its easy. You just have to read whats written, believe it and think literally. Wait, what? That doesnt sound right.Take this test, post your score. Be honest. Jesus knows when you're lying.
Yes it was.The second one was more interesting.
0 for 15
They were trick questions, anyway.
I guess I could say I got 100% --![]()
Hey, buddy!You're funny AV, I've missed you. How have you been?
You betcha!Thanks!![]()
You betcha!
I told Chrisbot: 'this one's for Avatar' when I passed his record --![]()
Answer 15.
a) Water is a molecule composed of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom.
b) Every observation or examination by microscope has confirmed this.
Conclusion
Therefore we can predict that every future examination of water will reveal the same chemical composition.
Invalid. The syllogism itself is invalid and can only be considered as a strong inductive argument and not deductive. It is the 'we can predict' part of the conclusion which comes from nowhere, so the argument is not strictly formal. There is an ongoing debate within philosophical circles as to whether water must conform to the molecule H2O. Some argue that it is logically possible for a substance to appear exactly as water and yet still be of a different chemical composition.
No, the conclusion is true, regardless of the premises. The argument is valid (which is what is in question) only if the conclusion is implied by the premises, which it is not.This is a stupid test. First of all, Premise B is irrelevent, there is no inductive reasoning. The conclusion that whatever is being examined is water follows from (A) alone.
In the first place: If whatever is in the microscope doesn't have this chemical composition then it is not water by definition, according to (a). Which would imply that the premise is valid, except...
In the second place: Just because the material is water doesn't mean it will appear to be water in the examination. The examination could be flawed. so the premise is invalid, except...
the conclusion states "We can predict". We can predict anything, just because it's not 100% correct doesn't mean we can't predict it. So the conclusion is valid regardless of the premises.
No, the conclusion is true, regardless of the premises. The argument is valid (which is what is in question) only if the conclusion is implied by the premises, which it is not.