Enthymeme
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An enthymeme is a syllogism (a three-part deductive argument) with an unstated assumption which must be true for the premises to lead to the conclusion. In an enthymeme, part of the argument is missing because it is assumed.
Enthymeme's three parts
The following quotation is an example of an enthymeme.
"There is no law against composing music when one has no ideas whatsoever. The music of Wagner, therefore, is perfectly legal." —Mark Twain.
The three parts:
- There is no law against composing music when one has no ideas whatsoever. (premise)
- The music of Wagner, therefore, is perfectly legal. (conclusion)
- Wagner has no ideas. (implicit premise)
More examples
First example: Socrates is mortal because he's human.
The complete syllogism would be the classic:
- All humans are mortal. (major premise - assumed)
- Socrates is human. (minor premise - stated)
- Therefore, Socrates is mortal. (conclusion - stated)
The complete syllogism would be:
- If evidence does not fit - acquittal is required (major premise - assumed)
- The glove doesn't fit the defendant. (minor premise - stated)
- Therefore, you must acquit the defendant. (conclusion - stated)
- The glove found at the scene of the crime
- The glove used by the assailant.
(This argument is based on one used by Johnnie Cochran in his defense of O. J. Simpson.)
Hidden premises are often an effective way to obscure a questionable or fallacious premise in reasoning. Typically fallacies of presumption (fallacies based on mistaken assumptions, such as ad hominem or two wrongs make a right) are attracted to enthymeme.
Enthymeme use in humor
Enthymeme can be a humorous technique when the hidden premise is something surprising due to the context, its offensiveness or its absurdity.Examples
- "Senator, I served with Jack Kennedy. I knew Jack Kennedy. Jack Kennedy was a friend of mine. Senator, you're no Jack Kennedy." —Lloyd Bentsen to Dan Quayle, 1988. (The hidden premises might be, Jack Kennedy was a great man, and you are not a great man.)
- "Now, I don't know or have never met my candidate; and for that reason I am more apt to say something good of him than anyone else." —Will Rogers. (The hidden premise is that once a person knows or meets the candidate they will not have as many good things to say about him.)
Use in advertising
Advertisers rarely draw out the links between the images they show and the product they wish to sell. There is no logical connection between a beautiful woman draped across the hood of a red sports car and the value of the car itself, but the advertiser implies a premise that there is. If the advertiser instead simply stated, "Buy this car and you will have more sexual satisfaction" it would be easier to reject as a premise.
To use another example, advertisers often show examples of people enjoying their product. They never actually state that the viewer should purchase the product or service that is bringing the people such enjoyment; it is an implied major premise.
Notes
Enthymemes are generally used for two reasons:
- The implied premise is obvious
- The implied premise is dubious
See also
External links
Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
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