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14 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
Two Kinds of Logical Reasoning
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Arguments and Sets of Facts
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Valid Conclusion
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A statement that must be true according to premise.
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Assumptions
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Unstated premises, in order to be valid.
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Types of conclusions
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therefore, thus, hence, consequently, so, it follows that, or it can be concluded that.
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Premises
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because, since or proven by the fact that.
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The Logical Reasoning Eight Question Types
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1 - Must Be True/Conclusion/Inference, 2 - Strengthen/Premise/Assumption, 3 - Weaken/Undermine/Challenge, 4 - Method of Reasoning, 5 - Parallel Reasoning, 6 - Resolve/Reconcile/Explain, 7 - Argument Structure, 8 - Cannot Be True/Must Be False.
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Type One Questions
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Must Be True/Conclusion/Inference
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Type Two Questions
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Strengthen/Premise/Assumption
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Type Three Questions
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Weaken/Undermine/Challenge
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Type Four Questions
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Method of Reasoning
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Type Five Questions
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Parallel Reasoning
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Type Six Questions
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Resolve/Reconcile/Explain
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Type Seven Questions
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Argument Structure
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Type Eight Questions
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Cannot Be True/Must Be False
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