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4.7 TRANSLATING ORDINARY LANGUAGE STATEMENTS INTO CATEGORICAL FORM 4 Categorical Propositions

4.7 TRANSLATING ORDINARY LANGUAGE STATEMENTS INTO CATEGORICAL FORM 4 Categorical Propositions

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Page 1: 4.7 TRANSLATING ORDINARY LANGUAGE STATEMENTS INTO CATEGORICAL FORM 4 Categorical Propositions

4.7 TRANSLATING ORDINARY LANGUAGE STATEMENTS INTO CATEGORICAL FORM

4 Categorical Propositions

Page 2: 4.7 TRANSLATING ORDINARY LANGUAGE STATEMENTS INTO CATEGORICAL FORM 4 Categorical Propositions

1 Terms without Nouns

Some cars are red ----> Some cars are red things (or red cars)

All clowns are happy ----> All clowns are happy people (or happy goofballs)

The point is, some accurate noun, but no particular noun, is required.

Page 3: 4.7 TRANSLATING ORDINARY LANGUAGE STATEMENTS INTO CATEGORICAL FORM 4 Categorical Propositions

2 Nonstandard Verbs

Other forms of “to be” beside “are” and “are not”

“Will”Some book bindings will tear ---> Some book

bindings are bindings that will tear (or things that will tear)

“Have been”Some guys have been swimming ---> Some guys

are guys that have been swimming (or people that have been swimming)

Etc…

Page 4: 4.7 TRANSLATING ORDINARY LANGUAGE STATEMENTS INTO CATEGORICAL FORM 4 Categorical Propositions

2 Nonstandard Verbs (cont)

Some statements contain no form of the verb “to be”:

All puppies bark ---> All puppies are demons that bark (or dogs that bark, or beasts that bark)

Page 5: 4.7 TRANSLATING ORDINARY LANGUAGE STATEMENTS INTO CATEGORICAL FORM 4 Categorical Propositions

3 Singular Propositions

Singular propositions are propositions that assert something about a particular person, place, thing, or time:

Rookie is an evil dog ----> All dogs identical to rookie are evil dogs

There is a sandwich on the counter ----> All places identical to the counter are places with a sandwich

Or

There is a sandwich on the counter ----> Some sandwiches are things on the counter

Page 6: 4.7 TRANSLATING ORDINARY LANGUAGE STATEMENTS INTO CATEGORICAL FORM 4 Categorical Propositions

4 Adverbs and Pronouns

Spatial adverbs:Where, wherever, anywhere, everywhere, nowhere (translate as

places)

Temporal adverbs:When, whenever, anytime, always, never (translate as times)

Anywhere you go, there you are ----> All places that you go are places that you are

Nowhere is where I want to be ----> No places are places I want to be

Or

Nowhere is where I want to be ----> All places identical to nowhere are places I want to be

Page 7: 4.7 TRANSLATING ORDINARY LANGUAGE STATEMENTS INTO CATEGORICAL FORM 4 Categorical Propositions

4 Adverbs and Pronouns

Personal pronouns:Who, whoever, anyone (translate as persons)

Impersonal pronouns:What, whatever, anything (translate as things)

Whoever misses class is in big trouble -----> All persons who miss class are persons in big trouble

What goes up, must come down ----> All things that go up are things that come down

Page 8: 4.7 TRANSLATING ORDINARY LANGUAGE STATEMENTS INTO CATEGORICAL FORM 4 Categorical Propositions

5 Unexpressed Quantifiers

You must use your understanding of what is being said in a sentence to determine the quantifier:

A dog is a potential disaster ----> All dogs are potential disasters

A dog is barking at me -----> Some dogs are dogs that are barking at me

Page 9: 4.7 TRANSLATING ORDINARY LANGUAGE STATEMENTS INTO CATEGORICAL FORM 4 Categorical Propositions

6 Nonstandard Quantifiers

A few leaves have fallen ----> Some leaves are leaves that have fallen

Not one leaf is green -----> No leaves are green leaves

All children are not sports-inclined kids ----> Some children are not sports-inclined kids

Or

All children are not fully educated kids -----> No children are fully educated kids

Few dog bites seriously hurt me ----> Some dog bites are bites that seriously hurt me and Some dog bites are not bites that seriously hurt me (read page 230 for an explanation of compound translations)

Page 10: 4.7 TRANSLATING ORDINARY LANGUAGE STATEMENTS INTO CATEGORICAL FORM 4 Categorical Propositions

7 Conditional Statements

“If, Then” statements are conditional statements; the part following “if” is called the antecedent (what comes before), and the part following “then” is called the consequent (what comes after).

Conditional statements are translated as universal propositions:

If it’s on the deck, then it’s mine ----> All things that are on the deck are my things

If you want it, then you can’t have it -----> No things you want are things you can have

Page 11: 4.7 TRANSLATING ORDINARY LANGUAGE STATEMENTS INTO CATEGORICAL FORM 4 Categorical Propositions

8 Exclusive Propositions

“Only,” “None but,” “None except,” “No … except” signal exclusive propositions. The language following those ‘excluders’ goes in the predicate term.

Only jerks drive off after dinging your door ----> All door dingers who drive off are jerks

No teams except NFC North teams are good -----> All good teams are NFC North teams

They like only KFC ----> All foods they like are KFC foods

(Read 232 about some cases that require compound translations)

Page 12: 4.7 TRANSLATING ORDINARY LANGUAGE STATEMENTS INTO CATEGORICAL FORM 4 Categorical Propositions

9 “The Only”

Unlike “only” the words that follow “the only” go in the subject term position.

The only good Chicago Bear is Brian Urlacher ----> All good Bears are players identical to Brian Urlacher

(compare to: Only Brian Urlacher is a good Chicago Bear -----> All good Bears are players identical to Brian Urlacher)

Page 13: 4.7 TRANSLATING ORDINARY LANGUAGE STATEMENTS INTO CATEGORICAL FORM 4 Categorical Propositions

10 Exceptive Propositions

“All except S are P” or “All but S are P” are exceptive propositions and require TWO statements to capture their meaning

All sandwiches except hoagies are icky hot ----> No hot hoagies are icky sandwiches and All hot non-hoagies are icky sandwiches

All but Toyotas are unreliable cars ----> No Toyotas are unreliable cars and All non-Toyotas are unreliable cars