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10 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
Inductive |
if the premises are true, it is unlikely that the conclusion would be false. |
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Deductive |
it is impossible for the premises to be true but the conclusion to be false. |
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Analytic |
true by definition (e.g. a triangle has 3 sides) |
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Synthetic |
can only be verified by senses (e.g. it is raining outside) |
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A priori |
based on logic and reasoning. |
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A posteriori |
based on empirical observations. |
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Cognitive Language |
conveys facts and knowledge |
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Non- cognitive language |
things that are not factual, e.g. feelings, metaphysical claims |
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Religious Language is not univocal and equivocal |
So the meaning of the statement is unclear as it concerns the realm outside of existence, so there are different interpretations. |
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The arguments to religious language attempt to conclude whether |
language has meaning or not/ if it is objectively useful despite it being equivocal |