Introductory Logic, review for week 13

123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930
Across
  1. 1. A statement whose truth value depends on evidence or information from outside itself
  2. 4. The term found once in each premise, and is not in the conclusion at all
  3. 8. The statement in an argument which is supported or implied by the premise(s);
  4. 10. A statement that has the opposite quality and a negated predicate of the original
  5. 11. Deductive argument with 2 premises and 1 conclusion
  6. 14. Definition that aims at persuading the listener one way or another
  7. 15. The term that describes or asserts something about the subject
  8. 16. A term that, within a statement, refers to ALL MEMBERS of its class/category
  9. 18. Reasoning to some conclusion based on other statements, whose truth value we know
  10. 19. A set of statements, one of which appears to be implied or supported by the others
  11. 21. The scope of a statement's claim about the extension of the subject
  12. 22. The premise that contains the minor term
  13. 23. Term that is more specific, narrow, or concrete than the original term
  14. 24. A statement which is always true because of its logical structure
  15. 25. When the truth of 1 statement requires the truth of the other.
  16. 27. One of the ways to determine the truth value of supported statements
  17. 28. A statement that affirms an outcome based on a condition. If P, then Q.
  18. 30. A number from 1 to 4 identifying the placement of the syllogism's middle term
Down
  1. 2. The statement(s) in an argument which support or imply the conclusion
  2. 3. Reasoning with certainty from premises to conclusions
  3. 5. A statement that reverses and negates both the subject and predicate of the original
  4. 6. A syllogism which is valid AND has true premises
  5. 7. The mood + the figure of a syllogism, listed together; e.g. AEO-3
  6. 9. The set of all terms NOT included in the given term (P → non-P)
  7. 12. A statement that gives the meaning of a term.
  8. 13. Statements which affirm or deny something about a given subject
  9. 17. The positive or negative nature of a statement's claim about the subject (Aff or Neg)
  10. 20. An argument in which a statement is unstated and assumed
  11. 23. A sentence which is either true or false
  12. 26. Definition which makes more precise what was vague or fuzzy
  13. 29. A concept that can be expressed precisely