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Syllogism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A syllogism (Greek: – "conclusion," "inference") or logical appeal is a kind of logical argument in which one proposition (the conclusion) is inferred from two others (the premises) of a certain f...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syllogism |
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Ken MacLeod writes Clay Shirky criticizes the Semantic Web in his article, The Semantic Web, Syllogism, and Worldview, to which Sam Ruby accurately assesses, "Two parts brilliance, one part strawman." Joe Gregorio responds to Shirky's piece with ...
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A categorical syllogism is a simple, basic syllogism consisting of three parts: two premises and one conclusion, all of which are categorical propositions. ... Also characteristic of a categorical syllogism is that it has just three categorical terms (quantifiers, for example: some, all, no, etc.), each of which can be used...
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Aristotle's doctrine of the syllogism was the beginning of formal logic. Aristotle was the recognized authority in logic for over two thousand years. He thought that by setting out ... Syllogism; A syllogism is an argument consisting of three parts, a major premiss, a minor premiss, and a conclusion. For instance:
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Introduction to logical form ... The Syllogism ... View a Venn diagram of this syllogism.
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2/3/2003: Parts of a Syllogism ... nMajor premise: Broad statement of ... nConclusion: Logical consequence of the...
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A categorical syllogism is composed of three, simple, categorical statements. The first two are called the premises, and the third is the conclusion. ... Since each statement must have two terms and there must be three statements then there must be six "slots" in a categorical syllogism for terms: a subject and predicate...
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