Asked by Nikia Walker
When building arguments of importance, is it more important to be valid or sound?
Answers
Answered by
Writeacher
http://www.answers.com/valid
http://thesaurus.reference.com/browse/valid
They are the same thing; you can tell because "valid" and "sound" are synonyms for each other.
http://thesaurus.reference.com/browse/valid
They are the same thing; you can tell because "valid" and "sound" are synonyms for each other.
Answered by
Nikia Walker
Well is it more important to be vaild or sound?
Answered by
GuruBlue
If you are valid, you are also sound.
A valid argument is a sound argument. A valid argument is based on fact; a sound argument is based on fact.
Conversely, if an argument is not based on fact, it is unsound, not valid.
There IS no difference.
A valid argument is a sound argument. A valid argument is based on fact; a sound argument is based on fact.
Conversely, if an argument is not based on fact, it is unsound, not valid.
There IS no difference.
Answered by
Brandon
Another word for valid is deductive. Technically, they are close in meaning. However, they are not interchangable. Deductive (or valid)refers to how the conclusion must absolutely follow given the premises. Sound means that the premises and the conclusion are all actually true. I have to disagree with the both of you.
Answered by
Nick
You're right Brandon. It is more important to be sound than valid when building arguments of importance.
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