PHIL 347 Week 6 Checkpoint Quiz Results.docx questions and answers new solution 2021
Week 6 Checkpoint Quiz Results for Nursing Student
Score for this
... [Show More] quiz: 100 out of 100
Submitted Sep 13 at 6:20pm
This attempt took 152 minutes
Question 1
What are the three fundamental reasoning strategies listed in the text?
Your Answer:
The three fundamental reasoning strategies are
1) comparative reasoning
2) ideological reasoning
3) empirical reasoning
Question 2
What is comparative reasoning? On what skill is it based?
Your Answer:
Comparative Reasoning "enables us to make interpretations, draw inferences or offer explanations by relying on something that is more familiar to understand something that is less familiar" (Facione and Gittens, 2016)
Question 3
We learned four tests for evaluating arguments: truthfulness of the premises, logical strength, relevance, and non-circularity. How well do these tests work with respect to evaluating comparative reasoning? Consider each of the four tests.
Your Answer:
truthfulness of the premises: this test does not work well when evaluating comparative reasoning because words like true or false are not favorable when evaluating comparison.
logical strength: this test helps us categorize comparison as " more or less plausible"
relevance: this test helps us establish relevance of the comparison between topics.
non-circularity: "comparative inferences should flow from what we know to what we project to be true."
Question 4
Briefly explain how we can determine if one comparison is more comprehensive than another.
Your Answer:
There are four tests we can apply to a comparison to determine if it is comprehensive or not. The four tests are
1) Are all premises true?
2) Are there counterexamples and how difficult is it to imagine them?
3) Are the premises relevant to the truth of the conclusion?
4) Does the truth of any premise depend on the truth of the conclusion?
(Criteria are found at p. 247) Familiarity, Simplicity, Comprehensiveness, Productivity, Testability
Question 5
According to the text, the basic question to ask when evaluating a comparison between two objects or ideas or events is “Are they alike enough in the important ways or not?” (p. 248). What are those “important ways” that determine the credibility of conclusions based on similarities?
Your Answer:
"The more pervasive the essential similarities are, the more relevant the comparison is, and therefore the more credibility a conclusion based on those similarities will have" (Facione and Gittens, 2016). [Show Less]