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Lesson Five

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Title: Lesson Five


1
Lesson Five
  • Love is a Fallacy
  • ---- by Max Shulman

2
Aims
  1. To have a basic knowledge of the terms in logic.
  2. To appreciate the humor in the story.
  3. To analyze the structure of the story
  4. To appreciate the language

3
Teaching Contents
  1. Special terms in logic
  2. Detailed study of the text
  3. Organizational pattern
  4. The chief attraction of the story 
  5. Language features
  6. Exercises

4
Time allocation
  • Terms in logic (15 min.)
  • Detailed study of the text (110 min.)
  • Structure analysis (15 min.)
  • Language appreciation (15 min.)
  • Exercise (25 min.)

5
Lesson Five
  • I. Special terms in logic
  • argument--a statement which is offered as an
    evidence or a proof.
  • It consists of two major elements
  • 1. conclusion
  • 2. premises -- a previous statement serving as a
    basis for an argument.
  • Conclusion is to be drawn from premises.

6
Special terms in logic
  • fallacy -- false reasoning, as in an argument
  • a weakness and lack of logic or good sense in an
    argument or piece of reasoning

7
fallacy
  • Usually, an argument is correct (deductively
    valid) if the premises can provide enough
    conclusive evidence for the conclusion. Otherwise
    the argument is wrong. It is said to be
    fallacious.

8
Special terms in logic
  • Three kinds of fallacy
  • 1. material fallacy -- in its material content
    through a misstatement of the facts.
  • 2. verbal fallacy -- in its wording through an
    incorrect use of terms.
  • 3. formal fallacy-in its structure through the
    use of an improper process of inference.

9
False Analogy
  • "High school should not require a freshman
    writing course . Harvard doesn't require a
    freshman writing course, and the students get
    along fine without it".
  • --- The analogy is false because the two items
    don't have strong enough similarities to predict
    that what happens in one will happen in the other.

10
Dicta Simpliciter
  • "Everyone wants to get married someday."
  • --- The example starts a logical train of thought
    with an assumption that is false. Not "everyone"
    wants to get married.

11
Evading the issue
  • There are a number of handy fallacies that people
    press into service to side step a problem while
    appearing to pursue the point. (????)

12
1)Distraction
  • "Suds ' n ' Puds is a great restaurant you can
    see how shining clean the kitchens are ".
  • --- The example is called distraction because the
    reader's attention is drawn to the cleanliness of
    the kitchen instead of to the excellence of the
    food, which is usually the determiner of a great
    restaurant.

13
2)Ad hominem
  • "against the person". "poisoning the well"
  • " Ms Bauer is a terrible English teacher. She
    always wears blue jeans"
  • --- Instead of point out faults in teaching
    technique, it calls attention to things about a
    teacher as a person that are unrelated to her
    teaching performance.

14
3)Ad misericordian (an appeal to pity)
  • "Look at this fourteen-year-old child who's run
    away from home to hide her shame-- pregnant,
    unwashed, friendless. penniless, at the mercy of
    our social service agencies. Can you till claim
    that sex should be taught in the classroom?"

15
3)Ad misericordian (an appeal to pity)
  • --- In this shifty approach to argumentation, the
    writer gives tear jerking descriptions of the
    cruel opponents' victims in order to arouse
    sympathy from the reader.

16
Hasty Generalization
  • "Mr Wang's handwriting is terrible. Mr. Hu's
    handwriting is also terrible and you know how
    terrible men's handwriting is ."
  • --- It applies a special case to general rule.
    That fact that certain person's handwriting is
    bad doesn't imply that all mens handwriting is
    bad.

17
Post hoc, ergo propter hoc
  • After this, therefore because of this"
  • "The last five times that I've worn my white
    pants, something depressing has happened. I'm not
    going to wear those pants again!"
  • -- This fallacy assumes that if event Y happened
    after event X, then X must be the cause of Y.

18
Circular Reasoning
  • or Begging the question
  • "Juan is an impressive speaker because he always
    touches his listeners deeply."

19
Circular Reasoning
  • --- This problem occurs when the writer tries to
    support a claim by restating it in different
    words. You can tell this example is circular by
    considering this Why is Juan an impressive
    speaker? Because he touches his listeners
    deeply.? Why are Juan's listeners touched so
    deeply? Because he is an impressive speaker.
  • impressive touching someone deeply

20
reel back
  • -- step away suddenly and unsteadily, as after a
    blow or shock
  • When she hit him, he reeled back and almost
    fell.

21
overcome -- be overwhelmed
  • If you are overcome by a feeling, you feel it
    very strongly
  • I was overcome by a sense of failure.
  • He was overcome with astonishment.

22
infamy
  • wicked behavior, public dishonor, being shameful/
    disgraceful
  • infamous
  • well known for wicked, evil behavior.
  • infamous action, wicked, shameful, disgraceful

23
rat -- metaphor (Am. sl.)
  • used for describing a sneaky, contemptible person.

24
modulate
  • adjust, vary the pitch, intensity of the voice
  • Some people are able to modulate their voices
    according to the size of the room in which they
    speak.

25
jitterbug --
  • 1. a quick active popular dance of the 1940's
  • 2. a person who did this sort of dance
  • Am. sl.
  • a person who is very nervous
  • jitters -- n.
  • jittery -- adj. nervous, unstable

26
Frankenstein
  • The young student in Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley
    (1797--1851) romance of that name (1818), a
    classic horror story. Frankenstein made a
    soulless monster out of corpses from church-yards
    and dissecting-rooms and endued (??)it with life
    by galvanism.(????) The tale shows the creature
    longed for sympathy, but was shunned (??) by
    everyone and became the instrument of dreadful
    retribution (??)on the student who usurped the
    prerogative (??)of the creator
  • http//frankenstein.monstrous.com/

27
The main idea of this lesson
  • It is about a law student who tries to marry the
    girl after suitable re-education, but he's been
    too clever for his own good.
  • The narrator, Dobie Gillis, a freshman in a law
    school, is the protagonist

28
Protagonist
  • a law school student
  • very young
  • clever
  • over-conceited -- cool, logical, keen,
    calculating, perspicacious, acute, astute,
  • powerful, precise, penetrating

29
Antagonists
  • 1. Petey Burch -- pitiful, dump, roommate,
    faddist
  • 2. Polly Espy --- beautiful, gracious, stupid

30
III. Organizational Pattern
  • 4 sections
  • Sect. I para 1-3
  • It is the author's note.
  • 1. The author's idea about this story.
  • 2. The author's idea about the purpose of this
    story.

31
III. Organizational Pattern
  • Sect II para. 4 --59
  • the bargain between the law student and his
    roommate over the exchange of the girl,

32
III. Organizational Pattern
  • sub-divisions
  • 1) p4 introduction of the narrator --
    protagonist
  • 2) p5-21 introduction of the first antagonist --
    Petey Burch
  • He downgrades his roommate, who has nothing
    upstairs.
  • 3) p22 -- 27 introduction of he second
    antagonist -- Polly Espy

33
III. Organizational Pattern
  • 4) p 28--40 sounding out / finding out the
    relationship between Petey and Polly.
  • 5) p.40 --59 unethical transaction over Polly
  • The student gives the raccoon coat the roommate
    wants, and his roommate gives his girl friend in
    return. They have a kind of deal.

34
III. Organizational Pattern
  • Sect III. para 60 -- 124
  • the teaching of 8 logical fallacies
  • 10 sub-divisions
  • 1. p60 --61
  • a survey, first date with the girl, first
    impression of the girl. He tries to find out how
    stupid she is.

35
III. Organizational Pattern
  • 2. p62 -- 74 the teaching of Dicto Simpliciter
  • 3. P75 -- 79 the teaching of Hasty
    Generalization
  • 4. p80--85 Post Hoc
  • 5. p86 --96 Contradictory Premises
  • 6. p97--98 interposition, He wants to give the
    girl back.

36
III. Organizational Pattern
  • 7. p99 --104 Ad Misericordiam
  • 8. p105--108 False Analogy
  • 9. p109-- 114 Hypothesis Contrary to Fact
  • 10.p 115--124 Poisoning the Well

37
III. Organizational Pattern
  • Sect.IV. para125 the ending of the story
  • backfiring of all the arguments
  • The girl learns her lessons too well. She uses
    all the logical fallacies to fight back her
    teacher.

38
Pay attention to the change of his emotions
  • 1. favoring her with a smile
  • 2. chuckled with amusement
  • 3. chuckled with somewhat less amusement
  • 4. forcing a smile/ ground my teeth
  • 5. croaked, dashed perspiration from my brow
  • 6. bellowing like a bull

39
IV. The chief attraction of this lesson
  • It's humor
  • The whole story is a piece of light, humorous
    satire, satirizing a smug, self-conceited
    freshman in a law school.

40
IV. the chief attraction of this lesson
  • Why
  • 1) the title
  • The title is humorous. The writer wants the
    readers to conclude that "love" is an error, a
    deception and an emotion that does not follow the
    principles of logic.

41
IV. the chief attraction of this lesson
  • 2) the author's note
  • "spongy", "limp", "flaccid" are specific
    characteristics of his essay. He is joking, which
    indicates that the whole story is humorous.
  • 3) the contrast --
  • the law student the girl Petey
  • boasting himself ----- downgrading the others
  • the student ---- the girl

42
IV. the chief attraction of this lesson
  • 4) the ending of the story
  • the raccoon coat which the law student despises
    and give it to his roommate for the exchange of
    his girl friend has finally become the rootcause
    of his losing his girl friend.
  • 5) the clever choice of the names
  • Pettey ---- pity
  • Espy ---- I spy

43
V. Language features
  • 1. American colloquialism
  • 2. Informal style
  • short sentences
  • elliptical sentences --- to increase the tempo
    of the story
  • dashes
  • 3. rhetorical devices

44
V. Language features
  • 4. sharp contrast in the language
  • 1) the law student uses ultra learned terms
  • standard English
  • 100 correct
  • 2) clipped vulgar forms, slang words
  • gee, magnif, terrif, pshaw,
  • 5. inverted sentences
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