In Exercises 15-42, translate each argument into symbolic form. Then determine whether the argument is valid or invalid. You may use a truth table or, if applicable, compare the argument’s symbolic form to a standard valid or invalid form. (You can ignore differences in past, present, and future tense.) If all people obey the law, then no jails are needed. Some people do not obey the law . ∴ Some jails are needed .
In Exercises 15-42, translate each argument into symbolic form. Then determine whether the argument is valid or invalid. You may use a truth table or, if applicable, compare the argument’s symbolic form to a standard valid or invalid form. (You can ignore differences in past, present, and future tense.) If all people obey the law, then no jails are needed. Some people do not obey the law . ∴ Some jails are needed .
Solution Summary: The author explains that the symbolic form of the provided argument is: lpto
In Exercises 15-42, translate each argument into symbolic form. Then determine whether the argument is valid or invalid. You may use a truth table or, if applicable, compare the argument’s symbolic form to a standard valid or invalid form. (You can ignore differences in past, present, and future tense.)
If all people obey the law, then no jails are needed.
Some
people
do
not
obey
the
law
.
∴
Some
jails
are
needed
.
Example 4 (Part 2) We can use Statkey to take 50 different random samples of size 20 each, find the mean of
each sample, and compute a confidence interval for each one. The graph of the sampling distribution of the means
is on the left below, and that of the 50 confidence intervals is on the right.
1. What does each dot on the left hand dotplot represent?
StatKey Sampling Distribution for a Mean
Percent with Internet Access (Countries) ▾
Show Data Table Edit Data
Choose samples of size n =
20
Upload File
Change Column(s)
Generate 1 Sample
Generate 10 Samples
Generate 100 Samples
Generate 1000 Samples
Reset Plot
Sampling Dotplot of Mean
Left Tail Two-Tail Right Tail
60
50
40
40
30
20
20
10
samples = 50
mean = 41.626
std. error = 5.089
:
.:
:
::
0
25
30
35
40
45
50
55
60
41.626
Data Plots
Confidence Intervals
95%->
Confidence Intervals
Coverage
48/50 = 96%
20
40
60
80
2. Circle the confidence intervals that failed to capture the true mean.
3. Circle the sample means that produced those…
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MFCS unit-1 || Part:1 || JNTU || Well formed formula || propositional calculus || truth tables; Author: Learn with Smily;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XV15Q4mCcHc;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY