Philosophy:Loosely associated statements

From HandWiki

A loosely associated statement is a type of simple non-inferential passage wherein statements about a general subject are juxtaposed but make no inferential claim.[1] As a rhetorical device, loosely associated statements may be intended by the speaker to infer a claim or conclusion, but because they lack a coherent logical structure any such interpretation is subjective as loosely associated statements prove nothing and attempt no obvious conclusion.[2] Loosely associated statements can be said to serve no obvious purpose, such as illustration or explanation.[3] Included statements can be premises, conclusions or both, and both true or false, but missing from the passage is a claim that any one statement supports another.

Examples

In A concise introduction to logic, Hurley demonstrates the concept with a quote by Lao-Tzu:

Not to honor men of worth will keep the people from contention; not to value goods which are hard to come by will keep them from theft; not to display what is desirable will keep them from being unsettled of mind.
—Lao-Tzu
不尚賢,使民不爭;不貴難得之貨,使民不為盜;不見可欲,使心不亂。
—老子

While each clause in the quote may seem related to the others, each provides no reason to believe another.

References

  1. Hurley, Patrick J. (2008). A Concise Introduction to Logic 10th ed.. Thompson Wadsworth. pp. 17. ISBN 978-0-495-50383-5. 
  2. "The logic of arguments". http://www.julianhermida.com/algoma/law1studyarguments.htm. Retrieved April 28, 2012. 
  3. "NONargument - Loosely associated statements". http://academic.csuohio.edu/polen/LC9_Help/1/12loosely.htm. Retrieved April 28, 2012.