kinds of logic
definition things
defining terms
relationship type terms
relating terms
100

the science and art of reasoning well

Logic

100

reasoning with probability from examples or experience to general rules

Induction

100

a concept that can be expressed precisely.

term

100

universal affirmative statements -- All S are P

A statements

100

the BEING (to be) verb ~ am is are was were be being been

the ONE basic verb in Categorical Logic

(list all forms)

200

If a statement is true, then it is true.

Law of Identity

200

reasoning with certainty from premises to conclusions

Deduction

200

the relationship between statements OF THE SAME QUALITY in which the FALSITY of

the PARTICULAR necessitates the FALSITY of the UNIVERSAL I → A; O → E

superimplication

200

particular affirmative statements -- Some S are P

I statements

200

a statement which is always false because of its logical structure

(e.g., Jesus is God AND Jesus is not God) A and ~A

self-contradiction

300

Any statement is either true or false.

Law of Excluded Middle

300

connects one category (or term) with another (uses syllogisms)

Categorical Logic

300

the relationship between statements OF THE SAME QUALITY in which the TRUTH of

the UNIVERSAL necessitates the TRUTH of the PARTICULAR A → I; E → O

subimplication

300

statements which affirm or deny something about a given subject

categorical statements

300

a statement by a person concerning his own desires, beliefs or feelings.

self-report

400

A statement cannot be both true and false.

Law of Non-contradiction

400

connects entire propositions together in arguments

Propositional Logic

400

the relationship between statements when they CAN both be FALSE, but CANNOT both

be TRUE only A ↔ E are contrary

contrariety

400

particular negative statements -- Some S are not P

O statements

400

a statement which is always true because of its logical structure

(e.g., Jesus is God OR Jesus is not God.) A or ~A

tautology

500

branch of logic which deals with the proper modes of reasoning

Formal Logic

500

Name at least THREE of the


6 purposes of definitions

1. show relationships 2. remove ambiguity 3. reduce vagueness 4. increase vocabulary

5. explain concepts theoretically 6. influence attitudes

500

a diagram of the basic relationships between statements WITH THE SAME subject and

predicate

square of opposition

500

the term being described, or about which something is asserted

subject in a categorical statement

500

when 2 statements can both be true at the same time

consistency (consistent)