Yes, you are right, I interpreted 'are' as 'being equal to', not as class membership. Is thinking in class memberships the right way to approach syllogisms in general? I find it hard to determine what context I can, and cannot use, since, as I understand it now, in logic, we ignore anything that's not in the premises. — Ulrik
But how about this famous argument from Aristotle, where he says:
If A is equal to B, and B is equal to C, then A is equal to C.
In this case we have to interpret 'equal to' as identical to, not as class membership?
If A = B and C = B, then A = C would be correct in that case. — Ulrik
No decent people curse
Americans curse
Therefore
Some Americans are not decent — Ulrik
based on the premises it says 'all Americans are not-decent', not just 'Some Americans are not decent'. — Ulrik
would be cool to know if I drew it correctly or not, I feel like if I can become good at drawing these diagrams I can finally understand logic. — Ulrik
In your first diagram, if all Americans curse, the entire circle of Americans should be inside of the entire circle of cursing people. — fdrake
In the case where 'All Americans curse' it's also true to say 'Some Americans curse'. But 'All Americans curse' is a stronger statement than 'some Americans curse'. In terms of the Venn diagrams, 'some Americans curse' means that the circles for 'people who curse' and 'Americans' overlap a bit, whereas 'All Americans curse' means that the circle for 'Americans' resides entirely within the circle for 'people who curse'. The important difference here is that when there's only a bit of overlap - when we can't say that all Americans curse, but we can say that some Americans curse - this means that there is at least one American who does not curse. — fdrake
What I fail to understand however is that you can conclude 'Some Americans curse' from the premise 'All Americans curse'. You see, I thought if one says 'Some people are nice', one means that 'some people are nice, and some are not', rendering the deduction from 'All people are nice' impossible. — Ulrik
I just told him the opposite; to put in the entirety of possiblilities first, and then eliminate regions and populate regions according to the premises. This method has the advantage that the same diagram structure can illustrate the relations between the various syllogistic forms as per wiki link above. I also think it is easier to spot errors. — unenlightened
But here you are just wrong. The usual convention is that universals have no existential import, such that "All Martians curse" does not imply that there are any Martians, but merely denies that there are any that do not curse. Whereas "Some Americans curse" implies that there is at least one American that curses, and specifically and definitely does not mean that there is, or is not, an American that does not curse. In this sense syllogistic meaning departs somewhat from ordinary usage — unenlightened
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