For the following questions, (i) formalize the argument, (ii) construct and complete a truth table, and (iii) evaluate that truth table. For your evaluation, determine whether the argument is a tautology, contingent, or contradictory, and decide whether it is valid or invalid. Please interpret disjunctions exclusively
Either a soul is a material entity or it’s a nonmaterial entity. If a soul is a material entity, then if an android is material, it could have a soul. Now an android is material. If God can do anything, God could infuse a soul into an android. Thus, an android could have a soul.
For the following questions, (i) formalize the argument, (ii) construct and complete a truth tabl...
For the following questions, (i) formalize the argument, (ii) construct and complete a truth table, and (iii) evaluate that truth table. For your evaluation, determine whether the argument is a tautology, contingent, or contradictory, and decide whether it is valid or invalid. Please interpret disjunctions exclusively If an android is rational, then it’s conscious, and if it’s conscious, then it has reflective mental activity. But no android has reflective mental activity, so it’s not rational.
For the following questions, (i) formalize the argument, (ii) construct and complete a truth table, and (iii) evaluate that truth table. For your evaluation, determine whether the argument is a tautology, contingent, or contradictory, and decide whether it is valid or invalid. Please interpret disjunctions exclusively. Androids can solve problems and they can deliberate. And if they can either deliberate or solve problems, then they’re rational. So androids are rational.