11 PHR - Fundamentals of Reason

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Across
  1. 2. An argument that has at least one false premise or an invalid structure.
  2. 5. The part of a conditional statement that comes after the antecedent.
  3. 7. A statement that must be true for another statement to be true.
  4. 8. A statement that alone can make another statement true.
  5. 9. An argument where the premises do not logically entail the conclusion.
  6. 11. An argument that has a logical structure where the premises logically entail the conclusion.
  7. 13. The statement that an argument attempts to establish.
  8. 15. A statement that connects two propositions and asserts that one proposition is true if another proposition is true.
  9. 16. An argument that has true premises and a valid structure.
  10. 17. A reasoning method that moves from specific observations to general conclusions.
Down
  1. 1. An argument that presents an opposing viewpoint to the main argument.
  2. 3. The process of drawing general conclusions from specific observations or examples.
  3. 4. A set of statements presented as evidence to support a conclusion.
  4. 6. A statement put forward as evidence in an argument.
  5. 10. A reasoning method that starts with general principles and moves to a specific conclusion.
  6. 12. The part of a conditional statement that comes before the consequent.
  7. 14. A comparison between two different things used to explain or clarify a concept.