Introductory Logic 1
Introductory Logic 2
Introductory Logic 3
100

A word, often a relative pronoun or adverb, that refers to a broad range of things or times

What is an inclusive?

100
Singular statements are best translated in this way

What is as universals?

100

The set of all terms not included in the given term

What is the complement?

200

Hypothetical statements should be translated this way

What is as universals?

200

Examples of exclusive words

What are only, unless, and except?

200

Examples of inclusive words

What are whoever, whatever, wherever, whenever, however, always, and never?

300

A statement that can be directly inferred from another

What is an immediate inference?

300

The words following the inclusive usually make up this part of the statement

What is the subject?

300

The words that follow an exclusive often make up this part of the statement

What is the predicate?

400

It changes the quality of a statement and changes the predicate to its complement

What is the obverse?

400
It reverses the subject and predicate of a statement

What is a converse?

400

It reverses and negates both the subject and the predicate of a statement

What is the contrapositive?

500

Indefinite statements may be translated in one of these two ways

What is as universals or as particulars?

500

Words that set boundaries, referring only to a limited class of things

What are exclusives?

500

Statements that use this exclusive word can contain two independent statements

What is except?