Slippery Slopes and Vagueness



Similar documents
A Short Course in Logic Zeno s Paradox

A. Schedule: Reading, problem set #2, midterm. B. Problem set #1: Aim to have this for you by Thursday (but it could be Tuesday)

A. Arguments are made up of statements, which can be either true or false. Which of the following are statements?

One natural response would be to cite evidence of past mornings, and give something like the following argument:

Critical Study David Benatar. Better Never To Have Been: The Harm of Coming into Existence (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006)

Beyond Propositional Logic Lukasiewicz s System

Handout #1: Mathematical Reasoning

P1. All of the students will understand validity P2. You are one of the students C. You will understand validity

Degrees of Truth: the formal logic of classical and quantum probabilities as well as fuzzy sets.

General Philosophy. Dr Peter Millican, Hertford College. Lecture 3: Induction

3. Mathematical Induction

The Refutation of Relativism

Quine on truth by convention

Study questions Give a short answer to the following questions:

The Meta-Problem of Change

CHAPTER 2. Logic. 1. Logic Definitions. Notation: Variables are used to represent propositions. The most common variables used are p, q, and r.

Kant s deontological ethics

A Short Course in Logic Example 8

A Few Basics of Probability

Invalidity in Predicate Logic

1/9. Locke 1: Critique of Innate Ideas

Discrete Mathematics and Probability Theory Fall 2009 Satish Rao, David Tse Note 2

Lecture 8 The Subjective Theory of Betting on Theories

Writing Thesis Defense Papers

Objective. Materials. TI-73 Calculator

Cosmological Arguments for the Existence of God S. Clarke

Read this syllabus very carefully. If there are any reasons why you cannot comply with what I am requiring, then talk with me about this at once.

How should we think about the testimony of others? Is it reducible to other kinds of evidence?

What Is Circular Reasoning?

WRITING PROOFS. Christopher Heil Georgia Institute of Technology

Last time we had arrived at the following provisional interpretation of Aquinas second way:

Inductive Reasoning Page 1 of 7. Inductive Reasoning

CHAPTER 7 ARGUMENTS WITH DEFIITIONAL AND MISSING PREMISES

CHAPTER 3. Methods of Proofs. 1. Logical Arguments and Formal Proofs

Reviewfrom Last Class

Philosophical argument

Full and Complete Binary Trees

On the Paradox of the Question

Arguments and Dialogues

Father s height (inches)

Organizing an essay the basics 2. Cause and effect essay (shorter version) 3. Compare/contrast essay (shorter version) 4

5544 = = = Now we have to find a divisor of 693. We can try 3, and 693 = 3 231,and we keep dividing by 3 to get: 1

Handout #1: Introduction to Bioethics

Picking Distractors for Multiple Choice Questions

Discrete Mathematics and Probability Theory Fall 2009 Satish Rao, David Tse Note 10

Lecture 16 : Relations and Functions DRAFT

3. Logical Reasoning in Mathematics

Basic Set Theory. 1. Motivation. Fido Sue. Fred Aristotle Bob. LX Semantics I September 11, 2008

Cultural Relativism. 1. What is Cultural Relativism? 2. Is Cultural Relativism true? 3. What can we learn from Cultural Relativism?

Phil 420: Metaphysics Spring [Handout 4] Hilary Putnam: Why There Isn t A Ready-Made World

Chapter 5: Fallacies. 23 February 2015

PHI 201, Introductory Logic p. 1/16

Sentences, Statements and Arguments

Free Will. Freedom: To possess freedom of choice is to possess the ability to do otherwise.

Divine command theory

Arguments and Methodology INTRODUCTION

def: An axiom is a statement that is assumed to be true, or in the case of a mathematical system, is used to specify the system.

Why There Are No People

The common ratio in (ii) is called the scaled-factor. An example of two similar triangles is shown in Figure Figure 47.1

8 THE TWISTED THINKING OF LOGICAL FALLACIES (CHAPTER 5)

Lecture 1. Basic Concepts of Set Theory, Functions and Relations

HOW TO WRITE A CRITICAL ARGUMENTATIVE ESSAY. John Hubert School of Health Sciences Dalhousie University

Linear Programming Notes VII Sensitivity Analysis

Mathematical Induction

Alecia Hudson. St. Edward s University

Hypothetical Syllogisms 1

Introduction. Percent Increase/Decrease. Module #1: Percents Bus 130 1

EXTREME POSITION MEAN POSITION EXTREME POSITION Save all of your money the rest.

Graph Theory Problems and Solutions

Vagueness, Degrees, and Gradable Predicates

INTRUSION PREVENTION AND EXPERT SYSTEMS

DEDUCTIVE & INDUCTIVE REASONING

Same-Sex Marriage: Breeding Ground for Logical Fallacies

COUNTING SUBSETS OF A SET: COMBINATIONS

This asserts two sets are equal iff they have the same elements, that is, a set is determined by its elements.

DEVELOPING HYPOTHESIS AND

We would like to state the following system of natural deduction rules preserving falsity:

Kant on Time. Diana Mertz Hsieh Kant (Phil 5010, Hanna) 28 September 2004

How To Defend Your Theory Of The Universe From A Philosophical Argument

Introduction to. Hypothesis Testing CHAPTER LEARNING OBJECTIVES. 1 Identify the four steps of hypothesis testing.

Philosophy 104. Chapter 8.1 Notes

Science and Scientific Reasoning. Critical Thinking

COMPARATIVES WITHOUT DEGREES: A NEW APPROACH. FRIEDERIKE MOLTMANN IHPST, Paris fmoltmann@univ-paris1.fr

BBC LEARNING ENGLISH 6 Minute English Do you think for yourself?

ThinkReliability. Six Common Errors when Solving Problems. Solve Problems. Prevent Problems.

Pascal is here expressing a kind of skepticism about the ability of human reason to deliver an answer to this question.

Pigeonhole Principle Solutions

Chapter 3. Cartesian Products and Relations. 3.1 Cartesian Products

The Cable Guy Paradox

Explanation, Slippery Slopes, Absurd Examples, and Abortion

Conservation of Energy is Relevant to Physicalism

Things That Might Not Have Been Michael Nelson University of California at Riverside

Why Hire an Immigration Lawyer?

CS 3719 (Theory of Computation and Algorithms) Lecture 4

Chapter 6: Probability

Transcription:

Slippery Slopes and Vagueness

Slippery slope reasoning, typically taken as a fallacy. But what goes wrong? Is it always bad reasoning? How should we respond to a slippery slope argument and/or guard against it leading us astray?

2 types of slippery slope arguments: Causal Claim that one thing will lead to another, and so on down the slope, to a (typically repugnant) endpoint. E.g. from voluntary euthanasia. to involuntary euthanasia Can question the causal claim will conclusion really follow? Or can question whether the endpoint is really unacceptable. Semantic There s no significant difference between one thing and the next in the chain, leading right through to the (perhaps absurd) conclusion. No non-arbitrary divisions E.g. abortion right before birth is wrong; one day earlier is still wrong. so abortion is wrong at any point after conception.

Causal slippery slopes can be based on semantic ones. E.g. the thought that because there s no non-arbitrary cutoff, one stage will lead to the next. We ll focus on semantic slippery slopes. They are examples of the Sorites Paradox. The denial of a non-arbitrary division is due to the vagueness of the ideas involved.

Consider a heap of sand. If you take one grain away, you still have a heap. Indeed, whenever you take just one grain away from a heap of sand, you re left with a heap. But, then, if you remove grains one by one this implies, absurdly, that the solitary last grain is a heap. Sorites Paradox for heap. Soros = heap.

Sorites paradox for tall : (1) 7 foot man is tall (2) A hundredth of an inch cannot make a difference to whether or not a man counts as tall So (3) a 5 foot man is tall Compare slippery slope arguments: E.g. for (2): if abortion is wrong n days after conception, then it s wrong n-1 days after conception. Same form of reasoning as mathematical induction: True for 0, if true for k then true for k+1; so true for n. The form of reasoning isn t a logical fallacy like If p, then q, q so p.

A paradox: compelling premises, intuitively valid reasoning but an apparently false conclusion. Paradox due to the vagueness of the central term. Because heap is vague, the removal of a single grain can t make all the difference to whether something counts as a heap; if it did heap would not be vague. Vague predicates: have borderline cases lack sharp boundaries Sorites paradoxes for all vague predicates, e.g. bald, child, red (Solutions within theories of vagueness)

Four types of solution: (a) deny the validity of the argument, refusing to grant that the conclusion follows from the given premises; or (b) Reject premise (2) (the inductive premise); or (c) contest the supposed truth of premise (1); or (d) contest the supposed falsity of the conclusion (3) The argument has the same form as mathematical induction and other reasonable arguments without vague terms, so (a) looks unappealing. (c) and (d) come together as a pair.

(c) contest the supposed truth of premise (1); or (d) contest the supposed falsity of the conclusion (3) Can run either way down a sorites series: (H+) one grain of sand is not a heap adding a single grain to a non-heap will not turn it into a heap; so, ten thousand grains do not form a heap. (H ) ten thousand grains make a heap removing one grain from a heap still leaves a heap; so, a single grain of sand is a heap. Accept the premises and the validity of (H+): it follows that we will never get a heap, no matter how many grains are piled up So there are no heaps (Accepting the conclusion)

With (H ) reject first premise. (H ) ten thousand grains make a heap removing one grain from a heap still leaves a heap; so, a single grain of sand is a heap. Sorites paradox for tall shows no-one is tall, Sorites paradox for bald shows there are no bald people, Sorites paradox for table shows there are no tables. Unger: There are no ordinary things. Not promising as a treatment for all sorites argument [But in some instances of slippery slope arguments, (c) or (d) might be the right response.]

(b) (2) is not true. (2) A hundredth of an inch cannot make a difference to whether or not a man counts as tall (2) If you take one grain away from a heap of sand, you still have a heap (2) If abortion is wrong n days after conception, then it s wrong n-1 days after conception. If each of these is false, we have x is tall and y is not tall, though y is only one hundredth of an inch shorter than x. Some particular grain turns the heap into a non-heap Abortion is wrong k days after conception but not wrong the previous day So vague predicates have sharp boundaries after all?

Vague predicates have sharp boundaries after all? Epistemic View vague predicates have sharp boundaries but we do not know where those boundaries lie. (Williamson) There s a single correct stopping point on the slippery slope, though we can t know where that is. Implausible??

Stipulation can provide sharp boundaries. Common for legal purposes. But often no stipulation actually has been made. And many different options would be OK if stipulation were required. So, appeal to stipulations doesn t give grounds for the Epistemic View or solve the sorites paradox. May be useful to consider all the sensible stipulations in a particular case. Supervaluationist Theory of Vagueness

Supervaluationism Borderline cases are neither true nor false the meaning of the predicate isn t determinate enough to settle them either way. Consider the various different ways of making tall precise: our language doesn t settle that any one of these gives the meaning of tall. We can still call any sentence true (or false) if it would be true (or false) on all ways of making its components precise. A borderline case sentence e.g. Tek is tall is true on some ways and not on others, so counts as neither true nor false.

Does the removal of a grain turn a heap into a nonheap? There is no particular grain for which is it true (on all ways of making heap precise) that it makes all the difference to whether you have a heap (hence heap lacks sharp boundaries). But since some grain makes the difference for each way of making heap precise, some grain makes the difference is true. Premise (2) is false. (2) A hundredth of an inch cannot make a difference to whether or not a man counts as tall

Using Supervaluationism to deal with a slippery slope argument: Ask: would you reject the premise however you make your notions precise? If so, then reject it. Doesn t mean that there is a non-arbitrary cut-off. The typical behaviour of vague terms is to allow a chain of insignificant differences to add up to a significant difference. We need to be wary of arguments that trade on this. Thinking about how vague expressions work can help with that.