PHI 1101 Study Guide - Eye Color, Iced Tea, Intelligent Designer

91 views10 pages
14 Jul 2014
Department
Course
Professor
ngrosie3 and 39926 others unlocked
PHI 1101 Full Course Notes
22
PHI 1101 Full Course Notes
Verified Note
22 documents

Document Summary

An analogy is a comparison of two or more things that are alike in specific ways: analogies can also be used to argue inductively for a conclusion. Such arguments are known as analogical induction" or argument by analogy". It works like this: because these two things are similar in several ways, they must be similar in some further way. ". Examples: animals, like humans, have nerves, a spinal cord, and a brain. So, like humans, animals must feel pain. ": humans can move, do math, and fall in love. Formally: thing a has properties p1, p2, p3, and, thing b also has properties p1, p2, and, therefore, thing b likely has property. How well does it work: like all nondeductive reasoning, good arguments from analogy only provide probable support for their conclusions. The more similarity there is between the two things being compared, the more likely the conclusion is.