Knowledge
Pseudoscience
Fallacies
Reasoning
Adquired Knowledge
100

What is knowledge?

Are facts, information, and skills acquired by a person through experience or education for practical understanding of a subject.


100

What is Pseudoscience?

Is a set of beliefs of statements that are presented as scientific but without any empirical basis or solid evidence to be considered as such.

100

What is a fallacy?

Refers to a reasoning or argument that seems logical and convincing, but is actually unsupported and may lead to erroneus conclusions.

100
What is reasoning?

the action of thinking about something in a logical, sensible way.


100

What are the two main conceptions of the origin of knowledge?

Rationalism and Empiricism

200

How do you obtain knowledge?

Throught the experience by a source of media or by talking with peers

200

Is the astrology an example of Pseudoscience?

True


200

What type if fallacy is this one?

Every person i see they wear those shoes, so im gonna use it also.

Of popularity (ad populum)

200

What is deductive reasoning?

Is based on the deduction of consequences from general premises.

200

What is empiricism?


Is the knowledge based through the experience

300

How does the subject acts on the elements of knowledge?

The subject is the person or the reciever of the information from the object.

300

What is the lack of empirical evidence?

Is the low source of empirical information.

300
What type of fallacy is this one?


If we continue throwing trash, the world will die from robots.

Slippery slope

300

How is reasoning divided?

Deductive, Inductive, Abductive, Analogical and Hypothetical-deductive reasoning.

300

What is rationalism?

Sustains the knowledge coming from reasoning and abstract thought.

400

What are the two brances of Philosophy?

Gneoseology and Epistemology

400

Is the lack of scientific support a characteristic of Pseudoscience?

True

400
What is a way to use fallacies?

Can be use to manipulate public opinions, and doesn´t have verifiable sources of information.

400

Premise 1: All human beings breathe.
Premise 2: John is a human being.
Conclusion: John breathes.

What reasoning is this?

Deductive reasoning

400

Name 3 empirist philosophers.

1. John Locke
2. David Hume
3. George Berkley

500

What are all the elements of knowledge and how do they work?

Subject: The reciever of information

Object: The information that provides to the subject

Operation: The mental-thinking of the information

Representation: The representation the subject makes from the object, could be with expressions or statements

500
What are all the characteristics of Pseudoscience?

Lack of empirical evidence
They are not falsifiable
Lack of scientific support
Arguments based on logical fallacies

500
What are all the fallacies?

Attack on person, Appeal to authority, Hasty generalization, Of popularity, Appeal to feelings, Slippery Slove, False dichotomy, Straw Man, Begging question, Incomplete proof, False causation, Ice man.

500

How all the reasonings work?

Deductive: Deduction of general premises.

Inductive: Observates the particularfacts to reach a general conclusion.

Abductive: Particular observation or facts and looks for possible explanations that can justify that fact.

Analogical: Bases on the idea that if two are similar in some respects they are similar in others.

Hypothethical-deductive: Is used in the scientific method to generate hypotheses and test them.

500

Name 3 Rationalism philosophers.

1. Plato
2. René Descartes
3. Baruch Spinoza

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