Introductory Logic

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Across
  1. 6. A difference of opinion or perception.
  2. 8. The premise containing the minor term.
  3. 9. A representation of a syllogism, having statements in standard order with standard abbreviations of its terms.
  4. 11. The three-letter descriptions of the types of categorical statements is contains when arranged in standard order.
  5. 12. A sentence that is either true or false.
  6. 15. The statement is appears to be implied by the other statements (the premises).
  7. 16. Two statements are _____ _____ if they imply one another.
  8. 18. The term being described, or about which something is asserted.
  9. 21. Reasoning with probability from examples or experience to general rules.
  10. 22. ...if and only if both statements can be true but both cannot be false.
  11. 25. Two statements are related by _____ if the truth of one require the truth of the other.
  12. 26. A term that is more general, broad, or abstract than the original term and includes it.
  13. 28. Two statements are _____ if the truth/falsity of one has no effect on the truth/falsity of the other.
  14. 29. A syllogism consisting of three statements in categorical form.
Down
  1. 1. The _____ _____ of a syllogism is the predicate of the conclusion and is used in one premise.
  2. 2. A statement cannot be both true and false.
  3. 3. The _____ of a syllogism is the mood and the figure of the syllogism.
  4. 4. A word whose extent is unclear.
  5. 5. A misunderstanding due to differing definitions for one or more words.
  6. 7. A statement whose truth value depends on evidence or information from outside itself.
  7. 9. A statement whose truth value can be determined from the statement itself.
  8. 10. The term that describes or asserts something about the subject.
  9. 13. A deductive argument with two premises and three terms.
  10. 14. A term that is more specific, narrow, or concrete than the original term and is included by it.
  11. 17. The sum of all the individual objects described by it (the term)
  12. 19. The positive or negative nature of a statement's claim about the subject: affirmative or negative.
  13. 20. The sum of all the common attributes denoted by the term.
  14. 23. Deals with operations of thinking that are indirectly related to reasoning.
  15. 24. The relationship between a universal and particular statement of the same quality, in which the falsity of the particular necessitates the falsity of the universal.
  16. 27. A word that has more than one definition.