- Arugment: A fixed amount of logic used to aid a claim. (Class Lecture)
- Conclusion: The claim that is summed up as support of the argument. (Class Lecture)
- Premises: The supporting assertions that serve as affirmation that the conclusion of the argument must be correct. (Class Lecture)
- Deductive Validity: A group of certainties that serve as factual proof to a conclusion.
- Inductive Validity: A sole reliance upon past circumstances to predict future outcomes.
- Soundness: A deductive argument that is considered valid when all premises are said to be true.
- Inductive strength: It is improbable for the conclusion to be false given the premises are true.
- True: A certainty that corresponds with universal truths.
- knowledge: Confirmed as a justified belief.
- consistency: A set of propositions that aren’t concurrently all true, we referred to as being contracting.
- Fallacy: A form of inaccuracy in argument.
- Fallacies of Relevance: Insufficient evidence to support for believing the truth of their results.
- Fallacies of Presumption: Making on unconscionable premises.
- Epistemology: The study of the world and its outlook and it’s awareness of confirmed belief.
- Form: Essence of fundamental accepted condition.
- Miniesis: Copycat or replicate
- Recognize: A shift in scheme oblivious to knowledge followed by a climax of provoked anticipation and/or forgiveness.
- Pitty: The sympathy towards one with obvious catastrophic agony that has been dealt with and is underserving of it’s pain.
- Fear: A touch of sympathy or pain with someone.
- Ad Hominem: An argument that is direct towards a person rather than the state they maintain.
- Slippery Slope: A thought or reaction that ends with a undesirable, inaccurate or adverse result.
- Skepticism: To alter the competency and accuracy of claims.
- Freedom of Action: The ability to operate on one’s motives.
- Freedom of Will: The competency to have the will one desires.
- Momentous: To have great importance in the present moment, life altering moment or a isolated moment.
- Existentialism: A moment that examines the world of it’s reality by asserting contact with life.
- Credulous: To pose or exert the ability to accept things.
- Scintillate: To live and complete at a high level.
- Veracity: A repetitive observration of truth in an argument.
- Fatalism: The belief that everything happens as an outcome of fate.
(365 words)