Phil 17 Sample Midterm on Parts 1-4
PART I (15 points): The following argument is invalid. Use the method
of refutation by logical analogy or Venn diagrams to prove the argument
invalid. All rock musicians are cool. So no nerds are cool, since
no nerds are rock musicians. PART II
(30 points): If any sentence below contains any errors of spelling or
grammar, rewrite the sentence and correct all errors. Do not arbitrarily alter
word choice or word order; don’t reword or introduce synonyms to avoid
correcting spelling. If the sentence contains no errors, do nothing. NOTE: Some
sentences contain no errors, some contain a single error, and some contain more
than one error. 1.
My
car starts everyday. 2.
No
one can truly no their own sole. 3.
Who’s
had lunch? 4.
The
parakeet is screeching, its time to feed him. 5.
I
hate these kind of mistakes! 6.
Lucy’s
breakup with Todd effected her performance. 7.
Born
at the age of forty-three, the baby was a great comfort to Mrs. Wooster. 8.
Who
do you think I saw the other day the Dalai Lama said my Aunt Minnie. 9.
Bay
Area athletes are winning a large amount of Olympic medals. 10.
When
Mom returned, she and Dad greeted one another with hugs and kisses. 11.
The
termites had a disastrous affect on the piano. 12.
My
principal objection is that the plan creates unnecesary traffic. 13.
No
one can prove the existance of angels. 14.
The
FBI sent Mulder and Scully to investigate the strange occurence. 15.
I’m
not conscious of any inconsistancy in the President’s testimony. PART III (15 points): Rewrite and improve the following paragraphs.
Prune unnecessary verbiage, streamline construction, eliminate passive voice,
improve word choices, etc. Make the sentences clearer and easier to understand.
Significant cutting and revision may be necessary. Be ruthless in the interests of clarity! 1.
The
average amount of commercials a thirty minute program airs is something like
eight minutes long. 2.
This
world we human beings live in is not without a variety of many different and
diverse cultures. 3.
If a
small group, say a culture in the Far East, believes that rain will be forthcoming
if it is prayed for, and then the rain falls, then they’ll have the belief that
their prayer worked and succeeded. PART IV
(20 points): Using the names in
Conway and Munson, name the forms (patterns) of each of the following
arguments, and say if each argument is valid or invalid. 1.
If
your homework isn’t done, you won’t pass the class. This is because if your
homework isn’t done, you won’t get any extra credit, and if you don’t get any
extra credit, you won’t pass the class. 2.
If
capital punishment deters murder, then the murder rate should increase when
capital punishment is abolished. The murder rate does not increase when capital
punishment is abolished. Therefore, capital punishment does not deter murder. 3.
If
Japan cares about endangered species, then it has stopped killing whales. So
Japan doesn’t care about endangered species, since Japan hasn’t stopped killing
whales. 4.
If
twelve million children die yearly from starvation, something is wrong with the
way food is distributed. Twelve million
children do die yearly from starvation. Therefore something is wrong with the
way food is distributed. 5.
If
Hoyle's theory of why the universe is expanding was correct, then the universe
had no beginning in time. But the universe must have had a beginning in time,
since Hoyle's theory turned out not to be correct. PART V
(10 points): True or false? 1. ____
If
all farkles are foodles, then being a farkle is necessary to be a foodle. 2. ____
Stipulative
definitions cannot be true or false. 3. ____
An
argument can be simultaneously both factually incorrect and logically correct. 4. ____
The
following argument is valid: "All dogs are carnivores. My cat Fluffy is
not a dog. So my cat Fluffy is not a carnivore." 5. ____
The
following argument is valid: "Bill Gates must be a genius. Why? Because
Gates is either a fraud or a genius, and he's no fraud." 6. ____
We
should avoid using open concepts in our arguments, since such concepts cannot
be precisely defined and we require precise definitions of all key terms. 7. ____
Deliberate
vagueness is sometimes socially or politically acceptable, but in general, we
should avoid deliberate vagueness when we write argumentative essays. 8. ____
There
are no substitution instances of valid argument forms with all true premises
and a false conclusion. 9. ____
Valid
arguments remain valid no matter what new premises are added. Adding premises
to a nondeductive argument, however, might radically strengthen or weaken the
support provided for the conclusion. 10. ____
If
an argument is clear and has a valid form, it can be refuted only by showing
that one or more premises are false or questionable. PART VI
(10 points). Answer the following. 1.
Give
an example of a term with more than one denotation. 2.
Give
an example of a closed concept, and explain why it is closed. 3.
Describe
a circumstance in which a precising definition would be useful. 4.
Give
an example of a singular term. 5.
Give
an example of an epistemological question. Extra
Credit (up to 10): What's going on in this argument? Is it valid? Why
or why not? If there were a highest number, you could always add 1 to
the supposedly “highest” number, and the result of the addition would be an
even higher number. Thus, the notion of a highest number is self-contradictory.
So there can’t be a highest number. Part VII (100 points) ESSAYS. Please type and
double space. Essays should be as long as
necessary to answer the question completely and clearly. For guidelines see
the section “Criteria for Grading Exams and Papers” in your syllabus. 1.
In your own words, explain the difference between
inductive and deductive arguments. Give
your own examples. Then explain why reasonable people should believe the
conclusions of sound arguments. 2.
Write an essay that critically analyzes the argument in
the following passage. (This is NOT an
editing exercise; the writer commits no obvious technical errors.) Whatever
people say, they're just expressing their personal opinions. And opinions are
subjective, after all. Because every person's set of personal experiences is
unique, nobody can be objective. Every person comes from somewhere; there's no
"view from nowhere." And so there's really no such thing as
"knowledge," since knowledge requires objectivity. All honest
opinions are equally correct. In fact, I'd even go further: I'd say there's no
such thing as objective "reality." We all live in our own private
little worlds. Who can say their reality is more real than anyone else's? 3.
Write an essay that critically analyzes the argument in the following passage. (This is NOT an editing exercise; the writer
commits no obvious technical errors.) I’m against
abortion, even very early in pregnancy, and here’s why. On the day a mother goes to the hospital to
give birth, it’s pretty clear to everyone that what she’s got inside her at
that point is a little person. The nurses and doctors call it her “baby” even
if it hasn’t been born yet. Now what about the previous day, the day before the
delivery? Nothing much has changed. It’s still a little person — just a
slightly younger person. And what
about the previous day — the day before the day before delivery? Slightly
younger again, but still a person. Where do you draw the line? I say you
can’t. And for that reason, no matter
how many days you count back, it’s still a person, and killing it at any point
is wrong. |