However, I'm not sure about the left drawing. It doesn't show that mammals are a subset of animals. It shows that only a part of mammals are also animals. — Alkis Piskas
So let's see our statemets:
A) Some animals are cats: Unknown
B) Some cats have four legs: False, since we know that "All cats have four legs" (and not only some)
C) No cats are animals: "No cats" is ambiguous - At best, it's Unknown, based on (A)
D) No animals that have not four legs are cats: "No animals" is ambiguous - Assuming that it means "none of the animals" then it is True, since cats have four legs
E) None of the above conclusions can be drawn: False, if we can accept (D) as True, else True.
It all depends on (D). And this also explains the doubt of the OP, who was not sure about (D) or (E). — Alkis Piskas
If you have a dollar in your pants pocket, do you (not) have also 32 cents?
— tim wood
No, you don't. A dollar is a dollar and cents are cents. Also, you cannot use some vending, gambling etc. machines if you don't have the exact amount of cents. — Alkis Piskas
it is true because its inference is valid — Alkis Piskas
A) Some animals are cats: True, since mammals are animals (based on the first premise) and cats are mammals
— Alkis Piskas
You can infer this adding additional information, but you cannot from the premises given validly conclude it.
— tim wood
You are right that you have to infer it, i.e. we don't know that directly, but it is true because its inference is valid, — Alkis Piskas
Mammals are a subset of animals. Cats are a subset of mammals. That is, cats are a subset of a subset of animals. — Alkis Piskas
It is true that some animals are cats. But it is not entailed by your premises.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
If it is true, well, it is True! That's what I said! — Alkis Piskas
Saying that "some cats are mammals" suggests that there are some cats that are not mammals. — Alkis Piskas
(A) is true, but it is not entailed by your premises.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Yes, you have already said that! — Alkis Piskas
B) Some cats have four legs: False, since we know that "All cats have four legs" (and not only some) — Alkis Piskas
"No animals" is ambiguous — Alkis Piskas
"All cats are mammals" does NOT imply 'Some cats are mammals" (because, if there are no cats, then "All cats are mammals" is vacuously true but "Some cats are mammals" is false). (Though I don't recall what, if anything, Aristotle said about that; and, while the notion of vacuous truth is basic in usual formal logic, it is not ordinarily used in everyday logic.) — TonesInDeepFreeze
This goes to the existential problem — tim wood
"The presupposition [...] contradictory relation." — tim wood
house rules — tim wood
If some ayes are bees, and seas are bees, then some ayes are sees. Unless not all bees are sees, which isn't given. — John McMannis
In what the OP said, I have replaced "Ayes" with "animals", "Bees" with "four legs" and "Seas" with "cats". All the rest is the same. The conclusion (D or E) is what the OP also thought (maybe for another reason though). — Alkis Piskas
there's no need to rack our brains on such a simple matter. — Agent Smith
1. Some Ayes are Bees.
2. All Seas are Bees.
No conclusion follows. — Agent Smith
:roll: — jgill
I was trying to see if the two statements could be used to form a classic syllogism — Agent Smith
It's simply impossible! — Agent Smith
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