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4.3: Support

  • Page ID
    306935
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    So, we can assess the truth or falsity of the premises of an argument by examining evidence or by evaluating further argument in support of the premises. Now we will turn to the other step in evaluating arguments and consider the ways in which premises can support or fail to support their conclusions. The question of support is distinct from the question of whether the premises are true. The reason one of our arguments about Sam the line cook was good but not the other had nothing to do with false premises. We can grant that the premises in both arguments were true. The difference had to do with whether the premises provided good support of the conclusion. When we ask whether some premises support a conclusion, we are asking whether we would have good grounds for accepting the conclusion if we assume that the premises are true. It is important that we keep the two steps in evaluating arguments distinct. When we evaluate arguments wholistically, as people often do, we wind up accepting or rejecting arguments based on how we feel about them overall without looking into whether the premises of the arguments really support the conclusions we draw. This is one of the ways we fall victim to confirmation bias, by endorsing just the arguments that point towards the conclusions we like without scrutinizing the logic of the argument.

    Consider again the two good arguments in our examples above:

    1. Sam is a line cook.
    2. Line cooks generally have good of kitchen skills.
    3. So, Sam can probably cook well.

    In this example the premises do support the conclusion. We have pretty good reason to think Sam can cook well if he is a line cook. But these premises don’t guarantee that Sam can cook well. It might be his first day on the job. He might be a really lousy line cook. Or he might be a breakfast cook and pretty useless in the kitchen beyond frying eggs and making hash browns. Still, the premises of this argument would give us good reason for trusting him with dinner. The premises being true would make it pretty likely he’d feed us well.

    Now consider this argument again:

    1. Boston is in Massachusetts.
    2. Massachusetts is east of the Rockies.
    3. So, Boston is east of the Rockies.

    In this argument the premises don’t just make the conclusion likely. The premises being true would guarantee the truth of the conclusion. There is no possible way for both premises to be true and the conclusion false. These two examples point us towards our two standards of support, deductive validity and inductive strength. A deductively valid argument is one where the premises, if they are true, would guarantee the truth conclusion. The support relation in the case of deductively valid arguments is logically necessary. Inductively strong arguments are arguments where the premises, if they are true, would provide good reasons for thinking the conclusion is true. But good reasons in inductively strong arguments are a matter of probability, not necessity. A strong inductive argument with true premises doesn’t guarantee the truth of the conclusion.


    This page titled 4.3: Support is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by W. Russ Payne.

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