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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...
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One of the earliest and most common forms of deductive logic was developed by the Greek philosopher Aristotle (384-322 B.C.). A categorical syllogism is a deductive argument containing three statements: two premises and one conclusion.
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Glossary of Religion and Philosophy - syllogism: minor premise major premise subject predicate subject term logical argument ... The major premise is the first premise in a syllogism and contains both major term and the middle term. The major term is the predicate term of the conclusion and the middle term is the term...
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Encyclopedia article about syllogism. Information about syllogism in the Columbia Encyclopedia, Computer Desktop Encyclopedia, computing dictionary. categorical syllogism, hypothetical syllogism, disjunctive syllogism ... Every syllogism is a sequence of three propositions such that the first two imply the third,
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All New Look ... Monday, March 16, 2009 | 4 Comments ... I was really getting sick of my old template, so I have been working on new one. This is a tweaked freebie from a template site - it had an integrated title header that I had to change in a photo editor to the title of my own blog.
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