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Notes On Introduction To Logic

Logic is the study of distinguishing correct from incorrect reasoning. It is defined as the science of laws of thought and reasoning. The logician's goal is to clarify the distinction between these types of reasoning regardless of subject matter. In legal writing, an argument must not just make sense but exhibit "pristine logic" through adhering to the syllogistic form with a major premise stating a general rule of law, a minor premise providing factual assertions, and a conclusion connecting the facts to the applicable law.
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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
457 views

Notes On Introduction To Logic

Logic is the study of distinguishing correct from incorrect reasoning. It is defined as the science of laws of thought and reasoning. The logician's goal is to clarify the distinction between these types of reasoning regardless of subject matter. In legal writing, an argument must not just make sense but exhibit "pristine logic" through adhering to the syllogistic form with a major premise stating a general rule of law, a minor premise providing factual assertions, and a conclusion connecting the facts to the applicable law.
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Irving M.

Copi, Introduction to Logic


I.

What is Logic?
The study of the methods and principles used to distinguish good
(correct) from bad (incorrect) reasoning.
Frequently defined as the science of the laws of thought
The Science of Reasoning
The distinction between correct and incorrect reasoning is the
central problem with which logic deals. The logicians methods
and techniques have been developed primarily for the purpose of
making this distinction clear. The logician is interested in all
reasoning, regardless of its subject matter, but only from this
special point of view.

II.

The Role of Logic in Law


In legal writing, it is not enough for an argument to make
sense or get the point across. A legal argument must exhibit
pristine logic. In order to exhibit pristine logic, a legal
argument should adhere to the form of the logic syllogism.
A syllogism consists of a major premise, a minor premise, and a
conclusion.
A major premise usually states a general rule. In legal
arguments, this is generally a statement of law.
A minor premise makes a factual assertion about a
particular person or thing or a group of persons or things.
In legal arguments, this is usually a statement of fact.
A conclusion connects the particular statement in the
minor premise with the general one in the major premise,
and tells us how the general rule applies to the facts at
hand. In legal arguments, this process is called applying
the law to the facts.

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