Knowlet

Unit 2: Categorical Propositions

The structure and classification of logical statements.

1. Sentence vs. Proposition

In logic, we do not study all sentences. We only study Propositions.

  • Sentence: A grammatical unit (Questions, Commands, Exclamations, or Statements).
  • Proposition: A sentence that is either True or False. Only "Declarative" or "Indicative" sentences are propositions.

Example: "Is it raining?" is a sentence, but not a proposition. "It is raining" is a proposition.

2. Standard Form of a Proposition

Every categorical proposition has three essential parts:

  1. Subject (S): The term about which something is stated.
  2. Predicate (P): The term that states something about the subject.
  3. Copula: The link between S and P (always a form of the verb "to be" — is, are, is not, are not).

Example: "All [humans] (S) [are] (Copula) [mortal] (P)."

3. The Fourfold Classification (A, E, I, O)

Aristotle classified propositions based on Quantity (Universal or Particular) and Quality (Affirmative or Negative).

Symbol Type Standard Form Example
A Universal Affirmative All S is P All cats are mammals.
E Universal Negative No S is P No birds are dogs.
I Particular Affirmative Some S is P Some students are hardworking.
O Particular Negative Some S is not P Some fruits are not sweet.

4. Distribution of Terms

A term is "Distributed" if the proposition tells us something about every member of that class.

  • A: Distributes Subject only.
  • E: Distributes both Subject and Predicate.
  • I: Distributes neither.
  • O: Distributes Predicate only.

Mnemonic: "ASEBINOP" (A distributes Subject, E distributes Both, I distributes Neither, O distributes Predicate).

Exam Essentials

  • Quantity vs. Quality: Be ready to identify these in any given sentence.
  • Logical Form: You will often be asked to convert "ordinary" sentences into "logical form."
    Ordinary: "Every dog barks." → Logical (A): "All dogs are barking animals."
  • Distribution Rule: Universal propositions (A, E) always distribute the Subject. Negative propositions (E, O) always distribute the Predicate.

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