Syllogism Is the simplest form of logical argument
You have your given like proofs in Gemometry = Major Premise AND minor premise
There fore,
It's important to evualte syllogirm
1. if they are true
No possession truth exsists.
the true, means factuable things in the world
theres no faith
2. if they are valid
does the conclusion follow from the presis, does the premisis support the conclusion
example, all students in SMHS are nice people
lily is a student is smhs therefore she is a nice person
the problem is in the premisis: not everyone is nice,
and not factually variable, but the validity can be there
an instance of a form of reasoning in which a conclusion is drawn (whether validly or not) from two given or assumed propositions (premises), each of which shares a term with the conclusion, and shares a common or middle term not present in the conclusion (e.g., all dogs are animals; all animals have four legs; therefore all dogs have four legs )
A syllogism is a kind of logical argument that applies deductive reasoning to arrive at a conclusion based on two or more propositions that are asserted or assumed to be true. In a form, defined by Aristotle, from the combination of a general statement and a specific statement, a conclusion is deduced.
- deductive reasoning, going from a general idea to a specific idea or case
- spot the bad logic: once you start reading and finding, you will spot it easier
more effective argue-er
BIG QUESTION:
MAJOR PREMISE: (CONTECT, BACKGROUND, WHY U ARE ASKING)
MINOR PREMISE:
WHY CAN'T PEOPLE ACCEPT
You have your given like proofs in Gemometry = Major Premise AND minor premise
There fore,
It's important to evualte syllogirm
1. if they are true
No possession truth exsists.
the true, means factuable things in the world
theres no faith
2. if they are valid
does the conclusion follow from the presis, does the premisis support the conclusion
example, all students in SMHS are nice people
lily is a student is smhs therefore she is a nice person
the problem is in the premisis: not everyone is nice,
and not factually variable, but the validity can be there
an instance of a form of reasoning in which a conclusion is drawn (whether validly or not) from two given or assumed propositions (premises), each of which shares a term with the conclusion, and shares a common or middle term not present in the conclusion (e.g., all dogs are animals; all animals have four legs; therefore all dogs have four legs )
A syllogism is a kind of logical argument that applies deductive reasoning to arrive at a conclusion based on two or more propositions that are asserted or assumed to be true. In a form, defined by Aristotle, from the combination of a general statement and a specific statement, a conclusion is deduced.
- deductive reasoning, going from a general idea to a specific idea or case
- spot the bad logic: once you start reading and finding, you will spot it easier
more effective argue-er
BIG QUESTION:
MAJOR PREMISE: (CONTECT, BACKGROUND, WHY U ARE ASKING)
MINOR PREMISE:
WHY CAN'T PEOPLE ACCEPT
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