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Cogency

 

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Cogency



 
 
An argument is cogent if and only if the truth of the argument's premises would render the truth of the conclusion probable (i.e., the argument is strong), and the argument's premises are, in fact, true. Cogency can be considered inductive logic's analogue to deductive logic's "soundness
Soundness

In mathematical logic, a logical system has the soundness property if and only if its inference rules prove only formula that are valid with respect to its semantics....
." As an example, consider the following.

Without looking, Lauren pulled out 100 marbles from a bag; 95 of the marbles Lauren pulled out were red.
Therefore, the next marble Lauren pulls out from the bag will be red.


The truth of the premises would, indeed, make the conclusion probable.






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An argument is cogent if and only if the truth of the argument's premises would render the truth of the conclusion probable (i.e., the argument is strong), and the argument's premises are, in fact, true. Cogency can be considered inductive logic's analogue to deductive logic's "soundness
Soundness

In mathematical logic, a logical system has the soundness property if and only if its inference rules prove only formula that are valid with respect to its semantics....
." As an example, consider the following.

Without looking, Lauren pulled out 100 marbles from a bag; 95 of the marbles Lauren pulled out were red.
Therefore, the next marble Lauren pulls out from the bag will be red.


The truth of the premises would, indeed, make the conclusion probable. Therefore, this argument is strong. If the premises are, in fact, true, then the argument is also cogent.

"Probable"

There is no standard of how likely an event must be for it to be called "probable." Just as there are degrees of probability, one can also speak of degrees of cogency. The degree of an argument's cogency, then, is a function of the argument's strength. In the above example, Lauren pulling out a 96th marble that turns out to be red would make the conclusion even more likely, and therefore the argument stronger. Note that this feature of cogency is a disanalogy from deductive logic's "validity," since a deductive argument can be either valid or invalid and nothing in between.

Good argument


For an argument to qualify as a good argument, it is necessary that the argument be sound
Soundness

In mathematical logic, a logical system has the soundness property if and only if its inference rules prove only formula that are valid with respect to its semantics....
 or cogent. But soundness or cogency need not be sufficient for a good argument. For example, a circular argument can be a sound argument, but it is certainly not good. Similarly, a cogent argument might nonetheless beg the question
Begging the question

In logic, begging the question has traditionally described a type of logical fallacy in which the proposition to be proved is assumed implicitly or explicitly in one of the premises....
. In order for a cogent argument to be a good argument, the premises of the argument would have to satisfy additional conditions, such as being acceptable in the context of discussion, and being relevant to the conclusion.

See also


  • Explanation
    Explanation

    An explanation is a set of Statement_ constructed to description a set of facts which clarifies the causalitys, wiktionary:context, and consequences...
  • Inductive reasoning
    Inductive reasoning

    Induction or inductive reasoning, sometimes called inductive logic, is reasoning which takes us "beyond the confines of our current evidence or knowledge to conclusions about the unknown." The premises of an inductive logical argument support the conclusion but do not entailment it; i.e....
  • Soundness
    Soundness

    In mathematical logic, a logical system has the soundness property if and only if its inference rules prove only formula that are valid with respect to its semantics....
  • Validity (logic)