Short Answer

Using the logical structure of rationalism demonstrated in the swan example—where a specific conclusion is deduced from accepted premises without direct observation—write a brief psychological scenario consisting of two premises and a logical conclusion about a participant's cognitive or behavioral state.

Question: Using the logical structure of rationalism demonstrated in the swan example—where a specific conclusion is deduced from accepted premises without direct observation—write a brief psychological scenario consisting of two premises and a logical conclusion about a participant's cognitive or behavioral state.

Sample answer: Premise 1: All participants who experience high test anxiety will perform poorly on the task. Premise 2: Participant B experiences high test anxiety. Conclusion: Participant B will perform poorly on the task.

Key points:

  • Constructs a general premise linking a condition to a behavior or trait.
  • Constructs a specific premise placing a participant into that condition.
  • Deduces a logical conclusion about the participant's state.
  • Applies the deductive structure of the swan example to a psychological context without incorporating direct observation.

Rubric: The response must apply the exact structure of rationalism: a general premise, a specific premise, and a logically deduced conclusion about a participant, demonstrating how reasoning alone predicts a state or behavior without direct observation.

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Updated 2026-05-27

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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

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