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27 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back

It must be truthful to gain validity and acceptance.



Knowledge

It can be considered as based on facts

Truthful statements

Are a series of statements that provide reasons to convince the reader or listener that a claim or opinion is truthful.

Arguments

It is a statement about the world or reality.


Are usually stated as short statements or sentences

Propositions

Are comprised of statements which not only give facts but also provide conclusion or perspective cigaretting certain institutions.

Opinions

If it's important in determining truth. If it's the tear or awareness and understanding of something

Knowledge

Is not evidently or immediately known to be true.

Claim

Our propositions or statements which are observed to be real or truthful.

Facts

It states that the belief is true if it can be justified or proven through the use of one senses.

Justification

Is a philosophical concept that contents that there are no absolute truth.

Relativism

Considered that ideas must be verified using the senses or experience.

Verificationism

Disbuse knowledge as based on agreement and that something is true if almost everyone agrees that it is true.

Consensus theory

It holds the view that something is true if we can put it into practice or is useful in real life.

Pragmatic theory

Is proposes that something is true if it makes sense when place in a certain situation or contacts and has a certain degree of consistency which renders it truthful.

Coherence theory

It's holds technology shape by social forces and influence by culture and history.

Constructivist theory

It's a defect in an argument or error in reasoning.

Fallacy

Using threat of force or coercion to advance an argument

Appeal to force

Attacking the person presenting the argument instead of the argument itself

Against the person

Someone tries to win support for an argument or idea by exploiting his or her opponent's feelings for Pity or guilt

Appeal to pity

Using emotions such as a pity or sympathy

Appeals to emotion

The idea is acceptable because a lot of people accept it

Appeal to the popular

The idea is acceptable because it has a long time

Appeal to tradition

Assuming the thing or idea to be proven is true also known as circular argument

Begging the question

Assuming a cause and effect relationship between unrelated events

Cause and effect

Assuming that what is true of a part is a truth for the world

Fallacy of composition

Assuming that what is true for the whole is true for its part

Fallacy of division

States that something is true if it corresponds to reality or the actual state of affairs

Correspondence theory