Hypothetical syllogism - Study guides, Revision notes & Summaries
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WGU C959 (2023/2024) – Complete and Accurate
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WGU C959 (2023/2024) – Complete and Accurate Proposition T/F statement 
exclusive or AꚚB 
inclusive or/disjunction AꓦB 
conjunction AꓥB 
What is the precedence for compound propositions? quantifier > not > and > or > conditional/bi-conditional 
Rows in truth table with N variables? 2^N 
When are conditionals true/false? If p(T) then q(T) = T If p(T) then q(F) = F 
If p(F) then q(T) = T If p(F) then q(F) = T 
Biconditional iff, ↔ 
tautology compound proposition that is alway...
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COMMRC 0310 Final Test Questions and Answers All Correct
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COMMRC 0310 Final Test Questions and Answers All Correct 
Burke's idea that we do not directly engage our environment but act upon it through language, mathematics, art, and other systems is called what? - Answer-symbolic action 
 
Burke's method of bringing fresh insight to the analysis of conventional problems by juxtaposing unfamiliar or even opposed terms, metaphors, or images is called what? - Answer-perspective by incongruity 
 
The idea that special insight into one area might end up bl...
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PHIL102 – saylor academy Final Study Questions and answers.
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PHIL102 – saylor academy Final Study Questions and answers. 
 
literal meaning - A sentence's grammatical structure and the conventional meanings assigned to the words used 
Conversational implicature - information that is understood through inference but is not actually said in a conversation 
implied meaning - This is a suggested, but not stated meaning 
reportive definition - A dictionary-type definition that attempts to capture how a word is normally used 
stipulative definition -...
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Philosophy Critical Reasoning Exam Questions And 100% Verified Answers
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Circular Reasoning - correct answer P because Q and Q because P 
Argument goes in a circle. 
 
Appeal to the Crowd - correct answer Most of expert crowd agrees on something that is right. 
 
Appeal to Pity - correct answer Compassionate to do something, therefore you should. 
 
Genetic Fallacy - correct answer ...
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Philosophy (Critical Thinking) Test 1
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Philosophy (Critical Thinking) Test 1 
Argument 
A group of statements in which some of them (the premises) are intended to support another of them (conclusion) 
Conclusion 
In an argument, the statement that the premises are intended to support. 
Critical Thinking 
The systematic evaluation or formulation of beliefs, or statements, by rational standards. 
Explanation 
A statement or statements intended to tell why or how something is the case. 
Indicator Words 
Words that frequently accompany a...
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NDSU Logic 257 Questions and Answers
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NDSU Logic 257 Questions and Answers 
logic 
is the study of methods for evaluating whether the premises of an argument adequately support (or provide good evidence for) it's conclusion. 
 
 
 
argument 
is a set of statements where some of the statements are intended to support another 
 
 
 
 
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conclusion 
is the claim to be supported 
 
 
 
premises 
are the statements ...
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Phil Midterm Exam Question And Complete Answers.
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What are A posteriori beliefs - correct answer Ones that require sense experience for justification 
 
What are A priori beliefs - correct answer ones that do not require sense experience for justification 
 
What is a valid argument - correct answer if it takes a form that makes it impossible for the premises to be true and the conclusion nevertheless to be false. The premises do not have to be true 
 
what is a sound argument - correct answer A valid argument with all true premises 
 
what is ...
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Phil*3040 Exam Review Questions And Detailed Correct Answers Success Guaranteed.
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What is the Separation Thesis - correct answer The claim that law should be kept separate from morality or that we should keep distinct law as it, instead of changing it into what it should be. 
 
Legal positivists essentially believe that the question of whether a law is a just or moral one should be left up to moral philosophers and not practitioners of jurisprudence. 
 
What is Utilitarianism - correct answer A theory ...
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GCU PHI-103 Exam 1 Study Guide Questions and Correct Solutions
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What is philosophy? (def) - is the attempt to provide for oneself an outlook on life based on broad fundamental principles underlying everything 
 
What is philosophy? (explanation) - defined by a concern of normative issues (what we ought to do) than is found in other objects 
 
Branches of Philosophy - 1 Logic (think or argue) 2Knowledge (Epistemology) 3Ethics (right from wrong) 4Political Philosophy (government form) 5Aesthetics (beauty) 
 
Constructive task of philosophy - attemp...
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PHIL 105 EXAM QUESTIONS WITH CORRECT ANSWERS
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PHIL 105 EXAM QUESTIONS WITH 
CORRECT ANSWERS 
padding - CORRECT ANSWER-name for identifying 
background noise (e.g. setting, restatement, jokes, definition) 
Biases, perceptions - CORRECT ANSWER-two main obstacles 
to critical thinking 
psychological obstacles - CORRECT ANSWER-those 
hindrances to critical thinking that arise because of how we 
think (e.g. fears, motivations, attitudes, desires) 
philosophical obsatcles - CORRECT ANSWER-those 
hindrances to critical thinking that arise be...
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