Summary
Section I
''General conception of the Nature ofSection II
''Of the Supreme Rules of all Ratiocination'' Kant declared that the primary,Section III
''Of Pure and Mixed Ratiocination'' If one judgment can be immediately discerned from another judgment without the use of a middle term, then the inference is not a ratiocination. A direct, non-ratiocinative inference would, for example, be: "from the proposition that all airplanes have wings, it immediately follows that whatever has no wings is not an airplane." Pure ratiocination occurs by means of three propositions. Mixed ratiocination occurs by more than three propositions. A mixed ratiocination is still a single ratiocination. It is not compound, that is, consisting of several ratiocinations. An example of a mixed ratiocination is: :''Nothing immortal is a man,'' : :''Therefore, no man is immortal;'' (this is a negative conversion of the preceding premise) : :''Socrates is a man,'' : :''Therefore, Socrates is not immortal.'' A mixed ratiocination interposes anSection IV
''In the so-called First Figure only Pure Ratiocinations are possible, in the remaining Figures only mixed Ratiocinations are possible. '' A ratiocination is always in the first figure when it accords with the first rule of ratiocination: A predicate B of a predicate C of a subject A is a predicate of the subject A. This is a pure ratiocination. It has three propositions: :''C has the predicate B,'' : :''A has the predicate C,'' : :''Therefore, A has the predicate B.'' ''In the Second Figure only mixed Ratiocinations are possible.'' The rule of the second figure is: Whatever is inconsistent with the predicate of a subject is inconsistent with the subject. This is a mixed ratiocination because an unexpressed proposition must be added in thought in order to arrive at the conclusion. If I say, :''No B is C,'' : :''A is C,'' : :''Therefore, A is not B'' My inference is valid only if I silently interpose the immediate inference ''No C is B'' after the first premise. It is merely the negative converse of the first premise. Without it, the ratiocination is invalid. ''In the Third Figure only mixed Ratiocinations are possible.'' The rule of the third figure is: Whatever belongs to or contradicts a subject, also belongs to or contradicts some things that are contained under another predicate of this subject. An example of a syllogism of the third figure is: :''All mammals are air-breathers,'' : :''All mammals are animals,'' : :''Therefore, some animals are air-breathers.'' This validly follows only if an immediate inference is silently interpolated. The added inference is a conversion that uses the word "some" instead of "all." :''All mammals are air-breathers,'' : :''All mammals are animals,'' : :''Hence, some animals are mammals,'' : :''Therefore, some animals are air-breathers.'' ''In the Fourth Figure only mixed Ratiocinations are possible.'' Kant claimed that the fourth figure is based on the insertion of several immediate inferences that each have no middle term. The affirmative mode of this fourth figure is not possible because a conclusion cannot be derived from the premises. The negative mode of this fourth figure is possible only if each premise is immediately followed by its unexpressed, unspoken converse as an immediate inference. In order to be valid, the negative mode ratiocination: :''No stupid man is learned,'' : :''Some learned persons are pious,'' : :''Therefore, some pious persons are not stupid'' must become: :''No stupid man is learned,'' : :''Consequently, no learned person is stupid;'' : :''Some learned persons are pious,'' : :''Consequently, some pious persons are learned,'' : :''Therefore, some pious persons are not stupid.''Section V
''The Logical Division of the Four Figures is a Mistaken Subtlety.'' Legitimate conclusions can be drawn in all four figures. Only the first figure determines the conclusion by pure, unmixed reasoning. The other figures use unspoken, inserted inferences. Logic should consist of open, not covert, reasoning. It should be simple and unmixed, with no hidden inferences. Previous logicians incorrectly considered all four figures as being simple and pure. The four figures were created by playfully changing the middle term’s position. This retained the rational conclusion but increased obscurity. Time should not be wasted on the study of the three mixed ratiocinations.Section VI
''Concluding Observation.'' The first figure yields a correct inference in a simple, direct manner. The other figures yield a correct inference indirectly by the addition of hidden inferences. They can be changed into the simpler first figure by changing the position of the middle term. Kant concluded the essay with several related remarks. Distinct and complete concepts are only possible by means of judgments and ratiocinations. A distinct concept is one which is made clear by a judgment. This occurs when something is clearly recognized as a predicate of a subject. A complete concept is one which is made distinct by a ratiocination. The ratiocination can be simple or a chain of reasoning. The ability to understand and the ability to reason are both based on the ability to judge. Understanding is the immediate recognition that something is a predicate of a subject. Reason is the ability to judge mediately. It recognizes another predicate in the first predicate, thus conceiving a subject indirectly by means of a remote predicate. Higher knowledge is based on judging. Framing a judgment is a reflection that results in a distinct concept. Non-human animals can have clear representations of things that are predicates of a subject. Humans can also have knowledge that a predicate is a predicate of a subject and are therefore able to make a judgment. Non-human animals can distinguish things from one another. The different ideas are the causes of their actions, which are irrational. Humans can logically distinguish between things by means of judgment. The higher knowledge of a human is based on the ability to make our own ideas the object of our thoughts. All affirmative judgments are based on the principle of Identity. A subject is identical to its predicate. All negative judgments have the principle of Contradiction as their foundation. A subject is opposed to its predicate. Judgments in which identity or contradiction is mediately known, by means of intermediate predicates and by means of the analysis of concepts, are provable. Judgments in which identity or contradiction is immediately known cannot be proved (See Section II). These unprovable judgments precede definitions because we must recognize a subject's predicate before we can define the subject.Reference in the Critique
Kant summed up his thoughts on this topic in a short footnote that appeared in the second edition of the '' Critique of Pure Reason'', B141. He had been discussing the definition of judgment in general. Logicians had usually defined it as a relation between two concepts. Kant disagreed because, he claimed, only categorical judgments are so defined. Hypothetical and disjunctive judgments are a relation between two judgments. In his footnote, Kant asserted that the lengthy and detailed doctrine of the four syllogistic figures concerned only categorical syllogisms or inferences. He stated that this doctrine is only an artifice or trick for giving the appearance that there are three more kinds of inference or modes of drawing a conclusion than that of the first figure. This is done surreptitiously by secretly concealing immediate inferencesAn immediate inference is one in which "from the truth of one judgment that of another may be discerned immediately without any middle term." Immediate inferences are usually produced by the use of contraposition or logical conversion. For example, the judgment '"nothing human is immortal" is immediately inferred by contraposing the judgment "nothing immortal is human." The truth of the judgment is understood immediately. An immediate inference is not to be confused with an immediate mark (predicate or attribute). An immediate mark is positioned between a subject and a remote mark (predicate). in the premises of a pure syllogism. The only reason that this was generally accepted, Kant remarked, was that the logicians had made people believe that all of the other kinds of judgments could be reduced to being categorical judgments. Kant claimed to have disproved this in his Critique, A 73. There he argued that a categorical judgment relates two concepts, whereas a hypothetical or disjunctive judgment relates two judgments.See also
* Square of oppositionNotes
References
*Immanuel Kant, ''Introduction to Logic'', New York: Barnes and Noble (Contains Kant's Introduction to his ''Logic'' and also a translation of ''The False Subtlety of the Four Syllogistic Figures Proved'') {{DEFAULTSORT:False Subtlety of the Four Syllogistic Figures, The 1762 books Essays by Immanuel Kant Logic literature Term logic Syllogism