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What is the difference between an unsound argument and an invalid argument? Give an example of each. When you are building an argument for an issue ... What is the difference between an unsound argument and an invalid argument? Give an example of each. When you are building an argument for an issue that is significant to...
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www.askmehelpdesk.com/other-subjects/unsound-argument-i...
www.askmehelpdesk.com/other-subjects/unsound-argument-invalid-argument-90405.html
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Many types of argument exist; we will discuss the deductive argument. Deductive arguments are generally viewed as the most precise and the most persuasive; they provide conclusive proof of their conclusion, and are either valid or invalid. ... As mentioned earlier, there is a difference between argument and explanation.
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www.infidels.org/library/modern/mathew/logic.html
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REMEMBER: Critical thinkers can tell the difference between a deductive argument and an inductive argument. Critical thinkers know that a valid deductive ... One or more of our premises is false. We also make improper use of them and our reasoning is invalid. In this case, our argument is both invalid and unsound.
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radicalacademy.com/arguments.htm
radicalacademy.com/arguments.htm
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look here for answer: http://www.philosophy.ubc.ca/faculty/…
http://help.com/post/21501-what-is-the-difference-betwe...
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A sound argument is an argument that is both valid and has all its premises being true. An invalid argument is where one can have all true premises and yet still have a false conclusion. Why use symbolic logic?
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www.angelfire.com/mn2/tisthammerw/rlgnphil/ontological....
www.angelfire.com/mn2/tisthammerw/rlgnphil/ontological.html
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There are a number of common pitfalls to avoid when constructing a deductive argument; they're known as fallacies. In everyday English, we refer to many kinds of mistaken beliefs as fallacies; but in logic, the term has a more specific meaning: a fallacy is a technical flaw which makes an argument unsound or invalid.
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www.trufax.org/general/beliefsystems.html
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When writers employ logic in composition, the emphasis seems to be on determining if the reasoning behind an argument is valid or invalid, and then using those determinations to support or ... To conclude, let us make one last distinction: there is a (technical) difference between a valid argument and a sound argument.
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papyr.com/hypertextbooks/comp1/logic.htm
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the difference between the two is subtle. No wonder the argument has never been decisively refuted; no wonder it ... Of the alternative non-modal translations of our ontological argument, the best are the arguments from 3A and 3B. The premises of the argument from 3B enjoy some credibility, but the argument is invalid.
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www.formalontology.it/ontological-proof.htm
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