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Fundamental Principal of Reasoning
If one uses a reason to justify one's belief, then "ceteris paribus" (all things being equal), one cannot deny the use of that reason to anyone else
Statement
a sentence which can have the property of being true or false.
≠straightforward questions or commands
True
A property of those statements which comport with reality
Logic
The study of the relevance between statements, and everything that is connected to it.
Relevance
Connection or relation to.
A statement is relevant to another when their truths are intertwined.
Difference between Truth and Logic
A true statement is a way of characterizing the world as it is.
Logic: only applies with 2+ statements, involves truth but is not the same thing, and addresses the ? of whether the truth of one statement is relevant to the truth of another.
Rhetorical question
A question which is not meant to be answered, but is meant to be used for rhetorical effect.
Way to make a point w/o directly asserting it
Not really a question
Can be a premise or conclusion
Ought imperative
A command which is best seen as a "should" statement.
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