Another example of the artificial logic of standard languages can be taken from syllogistic reasoning, which is often assessed on IQ tests. |
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Anarchism, like Coltrane, is the rational, syllogistic, positive rejection of convention and unjust orthodoxy. |
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Thus, contrary to Piaget's predictions, not only were adults not able to separate form from content, they had difficulty with syllogistic reasoning itself. |
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This argument can be put in standard syllogistic form as follows. |
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Aristotle's syllogistic covers only a small part of all arguments that satisfy these conditions. |
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Gundisalvi further distinguishes with al-Fārābī between five kinds of syllogistic reasoning, of which demonstration is the highest. |
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Following Quintilian, he stresses that the nature of syllogistic reasoning is to establish proof. |
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His philosophical terminology and syllogistic reasoning are derived from the works of these authors. |
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He sometimes produces syllogistic arrangements of these arguments. |
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The syllogistic thought makes it possible to conclude a new relationship between two elements with a third one. |
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What process of syllogistic reasoning can lead us to conclude that Hamlet is a greater work of art than The Long Goodbye, or that Goodbye is nonetheless a terrific book? |
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A regular syllogistic proposition, as opposed to a hypothesis, only has the first of these three components: the attribution of one term to another. |
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On the other hand, this revised Euler system is not a self-sufficient tool for syllogistic reasoning, since it cannot represent existential statements. |
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Mr Hitchens has been skewering the syllogistic arguments of the religious in the name of science ever since. Francis Collins, on the other hand, has it. |
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From the question itself, it is obvious that the king conceives of Judaism's emergence in purely naturalistic terms, akin to what the sage had previously identified as a syllogistic, governmental religion. |
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While his oath is surely no syllogistic argument, it is a performative utterance to be taken with the utmost seriousness, especially when the strictures against taking God's name in vain are recalled. |
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On the other hand, the pursuit of truth was far more a matter of disposition and temperament, critical experiences, moral sensitivities and a million other imponderables, than of syllogistic reasoning. |
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For two hundred years after Buridan's discussions, little was said about syllogistic logic. |
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