Trodon
Member
- Joined
- Jan 28, 2015
- Messages
- 224
- Location
- Pennsylvania
- Basic Beliefs
- I lean to the left on economic and environmental issues, and to the right on social issues. I am an Episcopalian.
This is an excellent introduction to deductive logic, inductive logic, and logical fallacies. When I was in college I took a course on symbolic logic. It did me less good than this website. This gives good information to use in forum debates (which all too often become insult contests. ).
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A deductive argument is an argument such that the premises provide (or appear to provide) complete support for the conclusion...
A good deductive argument is known as a valid argument and is such that if all its premises are true, then its conclusion must be true...
A good inductive argument is known as a strong (or "cogent") inductive argument. It is such that if the premises are true, the conclusion is likely to be true...
A fallacy is, very generally, an error in reasoning. This differs from a factual error, which is simply being wrong about the facts.
http://www.nizkor.org/features/fallacies/
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In political and religious arguments most reasoning seems to be inductive.
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A deductive argument is an argument such that the premises provide (or appear to provide) complete support for the conclusion...
A good deductive argument is known as a valid argument and is such that if all its premises are true, then its conclusion must be true...
A good inductive argument is known as a strong (or "cogent") inductive argument. It is such that if the premises are true, the conclusion is likely to be true...
A fallacy is, very generally, an error in reasoning. This differs from a factual error, which is simply being wrong about the facts.
http://www.nizkor.org/features/fallacies/
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In political and religious arguments most reasoning seems to be inductive.