That doesn't matter in the least. It's not an absolute, so it's inductive reasoning, not deductive.feather240 said:First, I believe I said it was more then half.NeutralDrow said:More or less. If your judgment is actually correct, pre-judging them doesn't matter.feather240 said:Wait, so it's not prejudice if you're right?NeutralDrow said:No, actually you phrased it right that time. In your OP, it seemed like you were doing the opposite (have to say, your two examples looked exactly alike).feather240 said:They're all criminals.(People holding knives to your throat.) Look at him, he's one of them,(He's holding a knife to your throat.) therefore, he's a criminal.NeutralDrow said:That's not deductive reasoning. If it's reasoning at all, it's inductive, just like your second example. Making an educated (or uneducated) guess as to the whole based on the parts you can see.feather240 said:In deductive reasoning you look at a large group to come to the conclusion of what something belonging to it is like. Here's an example:
They are all like that -- just look at him!
Deductive reasoning would be if you're dealing with something already inherent. Using those variables, a deduction would be:
They're all idiots. Look at him, he's one of them, therefore, he's an idiot.
This also demonstrates the possibility of incorrect parameters.
Maybe I lack the mental capacity, but I still don't get it.
So I guess to answer your question...deductive reasoning becomes prejudice when it resorts to stereotype, regardless of authenticity.
In other words, just because something is reasoned "deductively" doesn't mean it's right. If you reason that because they're all criminals, he must be a criminal, too, it's illogical if you're actually wrong in stating they're all criminals.
Thing is, though, prejudice is basically never deductive reasoning, no matter how it's phrased. It's based off of stereotypes that's have their root solely in inductive processes, because genuinely knowing the whole of a group of humans is too complex for all but the smallest groups. Again, even in your own example, if only 50% of Wasians are criminals, you can only induce that a given Wasian you see is a criminal. Deductive reasoning deals in absolutes.
It's a semantic problem, sounds like.And second, can't you have absolute uncertaintys?
It's absolutely true that I'm using a computer to type this.
It's absolutely likely that I'm using a computer to type this.
You see where my problem is? I can know absolutely that something has a possibility of being true.
You absolutely know that something is possibly true. That's an inductive premise ("Some X is Y"). "It" is true at least once, so it might be true again. Now there might be a possibility that "it" is always true, but the point of induction is that you can't know that for certain.
It's not deduction unless your premises are, by definition, completely true. Saying that you know something is possibly true is only expressing certainty in your knowledge of that possibility. You cannot logically deduce anything about the something just based on that, only induce.