Results 1 to 10 of about 6,500 (156)
One‐Sidedness and the Inferior Function in Coriolanus and Timon of Athens [PDF]
Abstract For both Jung and Shakespeare, one‐sidedness is the fundamental tragic trait. Jung proposed that as an individual develops, they inevitably associate their identity with certain modes of perception and interaction, and that this leads to psychological polarization.
Sofie Qwarnström
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People Like Logical Truth: Testing the Intuitive Detection of Logical Value in Basic Propositions. [PDF]
Nakamura H, Kawaguchi J.
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Conflict Detection and Logical Complexity. [PDF]
Brisson J +3 more
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What ergodicity means for you. [PDF]
Hunter MD, Fisher ZF, Geier CF.
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Mixed Conditional-Categorical Syllogisms from Avicenna to Urmawī
History and Philosophy of Logic, 2021A number of medieval Arabic logicians discussed inferences that combine the principles of propositional and term logic, for example: Whenever H is Z then Every J is DNo D is AWhenever H is Z then S...
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The effect of explicit negatives and of different contrast classes on conditional syllogisms
British Journal of Psychology, 2000One experiment tested the effects of systematically negating the constituents of four fundamental inferences based on conditionals: Modus Ponens (i.e. inferences of the form: if p then q; p therefore q), Modus Tollens (if p then q; not‐q therefore not‐p); Affirmation of the Consequent if p then q; q therefore p), and Denial of the Antecedent (if p then
W, Schaeken, W, Schroyens
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Aristotelian Syllogisms: Valid Arguments or True Universalized Conditionals?
Mind, 1974For centuries it was thought that Aristotle's 'syllogistic' was a codification of valid arguments. Early in the I950S, however, Lukasiewicz [8] offered the view that it was certain true universalized conditional sentences that were being codified. (The traditional notion of a valid argument has been explicated (Mates, [8]) essentially as follows.
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Denying Conditionals: Abaelard And The Failure Of Boethius’ Account Of The Hypothetical Syllogism
Vivarium, 2007AbstractBoethius' treatise De Hypotheticis Syllogismis provided twelfth-century philosophers with an introduction to the logic of conditional and disjunctive sentences but this work is the only part of the logica vetus which is no longer studied in the twelfth century.
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On the Conditions of the Syllogism
1992187. The syllogism, as Aristotle defined it, is an [argument]a such that, when more than one sentences are combined, something else follows from them of necessity, and not by accident. From this definition we know that what follows from the conversionb of a sentence is not a syllogistic consequence, since there is only one sentence, albeit something ...
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