A syllogism is like a special puzzle that helps you figure out something new using two clues.
Imagine you have a box of toys. If I tell you all the red toys are cars, and then say your favorite toy is a red toy, you can guess, your favorite toy must be a car! That’s how syllogisms work: they take two simple facts, and help you find a new fact that connects them.
How Syllogisms Use Clues
A syllogism has three parts:
- A general clue (like “All red toys are cars”).
- A specific clue (like “Your favorite toy is a red toy”).
- A conclusion you can draw (like “Your favorite toy is a car”).
Syllogisms Are Like Storytime
Think of it like telling a short story:
- “All birds fly.”
- “A sparrow is a bird.”
- So, "A sparrow flies."
You're using what you know to find out something new, just like in your favorite stories!
Examples
- All dogs are mammals. A cat is a mammal. Therefore, a cat is not a dog.
- If it rains, the ground gets wet. It is raining. So the ground is wet.
- Every student passed the test. John is a student. Therefore, John passed the test.
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See also
- What are premises?
- How Does Intro to Logic Part 2: Premises vs Conclusions Work?
- What is At its core, an argument consists of?
- What is inference?
- What is fallacy?