Results 61 to 70 of about 31,598 (234)
Belief–logic conflict resolution in syllogistic reasoning: Inspection-time evidence for a parallel process model [PDF]
An experiment is reported examining dual-process models of belief bias in syllogistic reasoning using a problem complexity manipulation and an inspection-time method to monitor processing latencies for premises and conclusions.
Ball, Linden, Stupple, Edward J.N
core +2 more sources
Abstract The term semantic primitives refers to a set of basic, atomic concepts from which all other (compound) concepts are constructed. It presupposes the principle of compositionality—the idea that complex items or expressions can be formed by combining simpler constituents.
Birger Hjørland
wiley +1 more source
Kıyas Şekillerinin Geometrik Yöntemle İrcâ‘ı
Öz: Bu çalışma mantık kurallarına uygun doğru bir kıyas kurmayı ve kıyasları birinci şekle hızlı ve doğru bir şekilde ircâ etmeyi sağlayacak geometrik bir yöntem önerisi getirmektedir.
Ekrem Sefa Gül
doaj +1 more source
From beliefs to behavior: Clarifying the roles of attitudes and context
Abstract Two commentaries by Tormala and Rucker and by Critcher and Galak offer complementary perspectives on our target article, Changing Beliefs versus Changing Behavior. Tormala and Rucker emphasize attitudes as proximal determinants of behavior, underscoring the importance of attitude strength and measurement compatibility.
Hogeun Lee, Dolores Albarracín
wiley +1 more source
ESÎRÜDDİN EL-EBHERÎ’NİN MUĞALATA’YA (SAFSATA) BAKIŞI
Sophisme, according to al-Abharî, is a syllogism consisting of incorrect propositions. These propositions are fallacy and deceptive. One approaches these syllogisms to deceive the other people consciously or unconsciously.
Kamil Kömürcü
doaj
Abstract Specific beliefs do not correlate with seemingly relevant behaviors for many reasons. Such correlations may be low even when beliefs perfectly cause behavior (e.g., because multiple beliefs compete for influence, because beliefs have various behavioral outlets). A belief may be a necessary precursor to, but not a guarantee of, a behavior.
Clayton R. Critcher, Jeff Galak
wiley +1 more source
Singular Predication and the Syllogism
Aristotle’s categorical syllogistic is the first formal deductive system in the history of formal sciences. Most parts or elements of the system are validated by modern (first-order) mathematical logic, but the system is quite limited in scope, as it is ...
Arman Besler
doaj +1 more source
Love at Arms’ Length: Reconciliationism and its Tentative Future
Abstract In a string of articles, over the years, Shawn Bawulski has propagated a palatable via media between full‐fledged apokatastasis and a traditionalist doctrine of hell. Though not original to Bawulski, reconciliationism, in the eyes of many, offers a more faithful and effective synthesis of varied Christian eschatological commitments.
Andrew Hronich
wiley +1 more source
From Logical Calculus to Logical Formality—What Kant Did with Euler’s Circles [PDF]
John Venn has the “uneasy suspicion” that the stagnation in mathematical logic between J. H. Lambert and George Boole was due to Kant’s “disastrous effect on logical method,” namely the “strictest preservation [of logic] from mathematical encroachment ...
Lu-Adler, Huaping
core
ABSTRACT This article investigates how the changing value of food due to the transition from famine to abundance after industrialization in the 1960s generated a shift in sociality and ways of being together in the Arbëreshë community, who immigrated to Molise during the sixteenth century.
Elisa Pastorelli
wiley +1 more source

