You are viewing revision 1.4.0, last edited by Vladimir_Nesov

An argument is valid when it contains no logical fallacies. Such arguments are not necessarily sound, because the premises may be false. For instance, the following syllogism is valid but has a false conclusion:

  • All animals are dogs. (False premise/All A are B.)
  • All dogs are terriers. (False premise/All B are C.)
  • Thereforse, all animals are terriers. (False conclusion: not all animals are terriers. Valid logic: If all A are B, and all B are C, then all A are C.)

Blog posts

  • 1 (tangentially related)

See also