(Answered) PHI103 Week 2 – Quiz

PHI103 Week 2 – Quiz

This attempt took 58 minutes.

 

Question 1

0 / 1 pts

What type of inductive argument is the following example?

“My dog loves broccoli. Your dog probably will too.”

Correct Answer

 

Argument from analogy

 

 

 

Inductive generalization

 

 

Statistical syllogism

 

 

Inference to the best explanation

 

The answer can be found in Section 5.7, “Arguments from Analogy,” of With Good Reason: A Guide to Critical Thinking.

 

Question 2

1 / 1 pts

Adding more premises to a valid deductive argument ____________.

 

can make it go from valid to invalid

 

 

can make it inductively stronger

 

 

can make the other premises true

 

 

 

cannot make it invalid

 

 

Question 3

1 / 1 pts

One way to make an inductive argument weaker is to __________.

Correct!

 

strengthen the conclusion

 

 

eliminate the conclusion

 

 

make the argument valid

 

 

strengthen a premise

 

 

Question 4

0 / 1 pts

Which of the following is true of the distinction between induction and deduction?

 

Inductive reasoning means going from the specific to the general; while deductive reasoning is the reverse.

 

 

 

Inductive reasoning means going from the general to the specific, while deductive reasoning is the reverse.

 

 

 

Some forms of inductive reasoning go from the specific to the general, while others go from the general to the specific.

 

 

Deductive reasoning never has a general conclusion.

 

The answer can be found in Section 6.1, “Contrasting Deduction and Induction,” of With Good Reason: A Guide to Critical Thinking.

 

Question 5

1 / 1 pts

What is the word for an argument that is inductively strong and has all true premises?

 

 

Cogent.

 

 

Sound.

 

 

Valid.

 

 

True.

 

 

Question 6

1 / 1 pts

In logic, which of the following is NOT true of all deductive arguments?

 

 

they reason from general to particular

 

 

they can be valid or invalid

 

 

if they are valid, it is impossible to have true premises and a false conclusion

 

 

if they are invalid, it is possible to have true premises and a false conclusion

 

 

none of these

 

 

Question 7

0 / 1 pts

What type of inductive argument is the following example?

96% of teenagers like rock and roll music
Mike is a teenager
So, Mike probably likes rock and roll music

 

Argument from analogy

 

 

 

Inductive generalization

 

 

 

Statistical syllogism

 

 

Inference to the best explanation

 

The answer can be found in Section 5.2, “Statistical Arguments: Statistical Syllogisms,” of With Good Reason: A Guide to Critical Thinking.

 

Question 8

1 / 1 pts

Inductive arguments should not be characterized as __________.

 

weak

 

 

very weak

 

 

 

valid

 

 

strong

 

 

Question 9

1 / 1 pts

What does it mean for an argument to be cogent?

 

It is valid and sound.

 

 

 

It is inductively strong and has all true premises.

 

 

It has a structure that is intended to be valid.

 

 

All of the above.

 

 

Question 10

1 / 1 pts

The premises of inductive arguments are intended to: __________.

 

prove the conclusion

 

 

 

increase the likelihood that the conclusion is true

 

 

be valid

 

 

promote an interesting discussion of the truth of the conclusion

 

 

Question 11

1 / 1 pts

“All men are mortal. Socrates is a man. Therefore Socrates is mortal” is what type of argument?

 

inductive

 

 

 

deductive

 

 

argument from definition

 

 

invalid

 

 

Question 12

0 / 1 pts

What type of inductive reasoning is the following argument?

Dentists say that flossing is important, so it must be true.

 

 

Statistical syllogism

 

 

 

Argument from authority

 

 

Inductive generalization

 

 

This is not an inductive argument.

 

The answer can be found in Section 5.6, “Arguments from Authority,” of With Good Reason: A Guide to Critical Thinking.

 

Question 13

1 / 1 pts

An argument is deductive __________.

 

if it moves from the general to the particular

 

 

if it moves from the particular to the general

 

 

if it presents itself in relation to a hypothesis

 

 

 

if it presents itself as being valid

 

 

none of these

 

 

Question 14

1 / 1 pts

Which of the following statements is likely to have the strongest inductive evidence?

 

Your teacher will eat an egg for breakfast tomorrow.

 

 

The Colts will win the Super Bowl next year.

 

 

There will be nuclear war next month.

 

 

 

The earth will continue to orbit the sun over the next five days.

 

 

Question 15

0 / 1 pts

“No cats are dogs. Some cats are mammals. Therefore, some dogs are mammals.” This argument is __________.

 

 

a mathematical argument

 

 

an inductive argument

 

 

 

a categorical argument

 

 

an argument by definition

 

The answer can be found in Section 3.3, “Types of Deductive Arguments,” of With Good Reason: A Guide to Critical Thinking.

 

Question 16

0 / 1 pts

The counterexample method shows that an argument is invalid by _______

 

proving the truth of the conclusion from the premises

 

 

 

proving that the conclusion is false

 

 

proving that a premise is false

 

 

 

finding an argument of the same form with true premises and a false conclusion

 

The answer can be found in Section 3.2, “Categorical Logic: Evaluating Deductive Arguments,” of With Good Reason: A Guide to Critical Thinking.

 

Question 17

1 / 1 pts

What type of inductive argument is the following example?

“I had mincemeat pie once, and it was terrible. So, it will be terrible next time too.”

 

 

Argument from analogy

 

 

Inductive generalization

 

 

Statistical syllogism

 

 

Inference to the best explanation

 

 

Question 18

1 / 1 pts

What type of inductive argument is the following example?

Every Eagles record I have heard has been great, so probably all of their albums are great.

 

Argument from analogy

 

 

 

Inductive generalization

 

 

Statistical syllogism

 

 

Inference to the best explanation

 

 

Question 19

1 / 1 pts

A valid argument is __________.

 

 

an argument in which it is impossible to have true premises and a false conclusion

 

 

an argument with true premises and a false conclusion

 

 

an argument in which it is possible to have true premises and a true conclusion

 

 

an argument that necessarily has true premises and a true conclusion

 

 

all of these

 

 

Question 20

0 / 1 pts

What type of inductive argument is the following example?

The majority of people surveyed prefer strawberry to chocolate
Therefore, most people prefer strawberry to chocolate

 

Argument from analogy

 

 

 

Inductive generalization

 

 

 

Statistical syllogism

 

 

Inference to the best explanation

PHI103 Week 2 – Quiz Answer

The answer can be found in Section 5.3, “Statistical Arguments: Inductive Generalizations,” of With Good Reason: A Guide to Critical Thinking.

Quiz Score: 20 out of 20