A syllogism is a systematic representation of a single logical inference. It has three parts: a major premise, a minor premise, and a conclusion. The parts are defined this way:
When all the premises are true and the syllogism is correctly constructed, a syllogism is an ironclad logical argument.
Notice that the major premise provides the predicate, while the minor premise provides the subject. As long as both premises are true, the conclusion must be true as well.
Is this argument true? It depends! Some people might disagree with the premises, or with the conclusion. It’s a matter of opinion. However, the logical validity of the syllogism is not a matter of opinion, because the conclusion really does follow from the premises. That is, if the premises are true, then the conclusion must be true as well. That makes it a logically valid syllogism regardless of whether or not you agree with the premises or the conclusion!
The major premise in this syllogism, of course, is wrong. In terms of its logical structure, there’s nothing wrong with the syllogism. But it’s based on a faulty assumption, and therefore the argument doesn’t work. If the major premise were true, then the conclusion would follow, which means the syllogism is perfectly logical. It just so happens that the premise isn’t true.
Syllogisms represent the strongest form of logical argument, so if you could build an argument entirely out of syllogisms it would probably be very persuasive! Like triangles in architecture, the syllogism is the strongest logical structure. When formed correctly, they are indisputable in terms of their logical validity.
However, it’s important to remember what syllogisms don’t do: they don’t prove their own premises. So you could build an argument out of very strong syllogisms, but it wouldn’t work if its original premises weren’t correct. Thus, you have to ensure that the starting point of your argument is solid, or no amount of syllogisms will make the argument successful as a whole.
Example: Although most have live young, some mammals lay eggs.
Although most have live young, some mammals (subject)
lay eggs (predicate)
mammals | lay eggs
Echidnas are mammals (minor premise)
Echidnas lay eggs (major premise)
If echidnas are mammals AND echidnas lay eggs, then of course it follows that some mammals must lay eggs.
Echidnas are mammals (persuasive because of scientific consensus)
Echidnas lay eggs (persuasive because of empirical observation)
Syllogisms are very abstract representations, and you rarely see them outside of formal logic and analytic philosophy. In other fields, it’s probably best not to write the syllogism out as part of your paper. However, it can still be very useful as a mental exercise! Even if you don’t end up showing the whole syllogism to your reader, you can write it out on scratch paper as a way of evaluating your own argument. If you can write your argument out in syllogism form, then you know it’s logical. If not, then there may be more work for you to do before the argument is ready for submission.
Each step in this syllogism seems to make sense, and the syllogism itself is logically sound. But the conclusion is clearly wrong! That’s because premise #1 is deceptive: in theory it’s true that 60 men can work 60 times as fast as one. But in practice things are not so simple, as Bierce’s clever example shows.
Clearly, premise #2 is wrong, and the conclusion is wrong as well. But if premise #2 were correct, then the conclusion would be correct as well. That means the syllogism is logically valid though factually incorrect
There are many potential problems with this argument, but the most obvious one is that it (probably) has at least one false premise: women probably don’t truly prefer men who purchase that particular brand. In addition, the viewer may well be a woman or a gay man, in which case the other premise is also false.
In one episode of House, the title character refers to a “faulty syllogism” in a way that’s not entirely clear. But the syllogism he’s referring to looks like this:
The syllogism is clearly faulty because premise #2 is false.
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