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Syllogism

What you'll learn

  • Interpret the four standard types of statements in syllogism
  • Draw Venn diagrams to represent each statement type
  • Derive valid conclusions from two premises
  • Apply immediate inferences (conversion) to check conclusions

Key concepts

The Four Standard Statement Types

TypeFormMeaningSymbol
Universal PositiveAll A are BEvery member of A belongs to BA
Universal NegativeNo A is BNo member of A belongs to BE
Particular PositiveSome A are BAt least one member of A belongs to BI
Particular NegativeSome A are not BAt least one member of A does not belong to BO

Memory trick: The vowels A, E, I, O come from the Latin words Affirmo (I affirm) and nEgo (I deny). A and I are positive; E and O are negative.


Venn Diagram Representations

All A are B — Circle A is completely inside circle B.

  [ B [ A ] ]

No A is B — Circles A and B do not overlap at all.

  [A]    [B]

Some A are B — Circles A and B partially overlap.

  [A ∩ B]

Some A are not B — Part of A is outside B.

  [ A [A∩B] B ]  — part of A is outside B

Drawing Valid Conclusions — The Standard Rules

When given two premises, apply these tested rules:

Premise 1Premise 2Valid Conclusion
All A are BAll B are CAll A are C
All A are BNo B is CNo A is C
All A are BSome B are CSome A are C
Some A are BAll B are CSome A are C
Some A are BNo B is CSome A are not C
No A is BAll B is CSome C are not A
No A is BSome B are CSome C are not A

Golden rule: A conclusion can only be as strong as the weaker premise. If either premise is "Some," the conclusion cannot be "All."


Worked Example 1

Statements:

  1. All birds are animals.
  2. All animals are living beings.

Conclusion I: All birds are living beings. Conclusion II: Some living beings are birds.

Using Venn diagram: Birds ⊂ Animals ⊂ Living Beings → Birds ⊂ Living Beings.

  • Conclusion I: All birds are living beings → True (All A are B, All B are C → All A are C).
  • Conclusion II: Some living beings are birds → True (since all birds are living beings, some living beings must be birds — conversion of Conclusion I).

Both conclusions follow.


Worked Example 2

Statements:

  1. Some pens are books.
  2. No book is a pencil.

Conclusion I: Some pens are not pencils. Conclusion II: No pen is a pencil.

  • Premise 1 is "Some A are B" (Particular Positive).
  • Premise 2 is "No B is C" (Universal Negative).
  • Rule: Some A are B + No B is C → Some A are not C.
  • Conclusion I: Some pens are not pencils → Follows.
  • Conclusion II: No pen is a pencil → Too strong (we only know SOME pens are books; other pens may or may not be pencils) → Does not follow.

Immediate Inferences (Conversion)

Sometimes the conclusion is just a converted form of one of the given statements.

Original StatementValid Conversion
All A are BSome B are A (valid)
No A is BNo B is A (valid)
Some A are BSome B are A (valid)
Some A are not BNo valid conversion

Example: "All cats are mammals" → "Some mammals are cats" is a valid immediate inference.


Either-Or Conclusions

When neither Conclusion I nor Conclusion II independently follows, check if together they form a complementary pair:

  • Conclusion I: Some A are B
  • Conclusion II: No A is B

These are complementary (one must be true). In such cases, answer: "Either I or II follows."


Quick check

  1. Statements: All flowers are trees. No tree is water. Conclusion: No flower is water. Does it follow?
  2. Statements: Some dogs are cats. All cats are birds. Conclusion: Some dogs are birds. Does it follow?
  3. Convert the statement "All teachers are learners" using immediate inference.
  4. Can the conclusion "All A are C" follow if one of the premises is "Some A are B"? Why or why not?
  5. Statements: No river is a mountain. Some mountains are trees. What valid conclusion follows?

Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Syllogism.

3 topics • Notes • Practice • AI explanations available

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