Review of Logese
The 10 Pigeonholes
Five Things You Say About Things You Say About Things
Definitions
Trivium Pursuit
100

An argument in which the conclusion asserts no more than is found in the premises and which guarantees the truth of the conclusion is called this.

What is Deductive Argument.

100

The two properties of simple apprehension are summed up in these two terms.

What are Comprehension and Extension.

100

The five predicables are defined as this.

What are "five ways in which a universal concept may be said of an inferior."

100

The Definition of Definition

What is "the act whereby the intellect expresses the comprehension of a concept."

100

"He made a biting comment about my dog" is an example of this kind of predication.

What is according to qualification.

200
The condition that obtains when there are both true premises and valid argumentation.

What is Soundness.

200

The Categories, in strict usage, means this.

What is "a system of classification of the ten kinds of names [universal concepts] we attach to things."

200

This mental arborist provided a mnemonic for recalling the order of genus and difference in the extension of terms.

Who is Porphyry.

200

A "word which means the same as another word" is a synonym for this term.

What is Synonym

200

"This is the house that Jack built" is a definition according to this extrinsic cause.

What is Efficient Cause

300

The three divisions of Material Logic are said to be these. 

What are Modes of Being, Modes of Knowing, and Modes of Argumentation.

300

The 10 Categories in Order

What are Substance, Quantity, Quality, Relation, Action, Passion, Time, Place, Posture, and Possession.

300

A universal predicable of many things that differ either in number or or species is called this.

What is Difference

300

This kind of indirect definition reveals the essence of a thing according to its purpose or activity.

What is Definition in terms of Final Cause

300

The Seven Rules for Categorical Syllogisms 

What is: There must be three and only three terms; the middle term must not appear in the conclusion; a term that is distributed in the conclusion must also be distributed in the premises; no conclusion can follow from two negative premises; if the premises are both affirmative, then the conclusion if affirmative; if one premise is affirmative and the other is negative, then the conclusion is negative.

400

A form of argumentation based on theories or opinions that only yields probable conclusions.

What is Dialectical Reasoning.

400

The first division of Categories is between this and this.

What are Substance and Accident

400

"Polly is a guinea pig and turned a purplish hue" is an example of which two predicables?

What are Species and Accident.

400

The Three Divisions of Definition are This, That, and the Other Thing.

What are "(1) Essential and Non-Essential, (2) Property and Extrinsic Cause, (3) Final Cause and Efficient Cause."

400

The principles Dictum de Omne and Dictum de Nullo mean this.

That "what is affirmed universally of a certain term is affirmed of every term that comes under that term" and "what is denied universally of a certain term is denied of every term that comes under that term."

500

Conditionals, Disjunctives, and Conjunctives comprise this branch of  formal deductive logic.

What are Hypothetical Dyllogisms.

500

"The galaxy in the universe is rotating and being rotated at a slow rate of xK/y" exemplifies these 5 out of the 10 Categories.

What are Substance, Place, Action, Passion, Time

500

An accident separable from the species of the subject but not separable from individuals within the species is called this.

What is Partially Separable Accident

500

The two principle parts of any real definition are these.

What are genus and difference.

500

The full division of material logic (all main parts of each division)

What is: (1) Modes of Being, 10 Categories and 5 Predicables, (2) Modes of Knowing, Definition and Division, Three modes of argument: necessary, probable, and fallacious; (3) Modes of Argumentation, Four Kinds of Argument: judicative, dialectical, rhetorical, and poetic.