Philosophy: Sophist, Syllogism and Propositions
[2023-05-14 14:35:34]
What students must know to know that everything else is axiom. If the paper argues, this is a hypothesis, otherwise it is a definition. In short, he said that the foundation of knowledge is a model triangulation theory and its foundation is a premise, so we must know that the main premise is better than the conclusion ). For those seeking knowledge through demonstration, there is nothing better than the basic truth. Part 2 Next, Aristotle explains that knowledge is the answer to the four questions. It is whether there is a connection between an attribute and an object, the reason of the connection, the existence of things, the nature of things.
Categories are intended to enumerate all possibly existing ones. "Interpretation" introduces Aristotle's proposition, argument about assertion or denial. Prior Analytics describes his research on deductive reasoning, especially discussion on syllabism. One of them comes directly from the other two propositions, that is, the conclusion comes from two premises. In a posteriori analysis, we explain demonstration, definition, and scientific knowledge. The subject includes the construction of valid arguments, and in the comment above, Aristotle discusses logical flaws.
The logic center of Aristotle is a syllabic theory (or deductive logic or term logic), he developed it with his "previous analysis" (the third book of "Organon"). In syllabic theory, the proposition (conclusion) is inferred from the other two (premise), and each proposition has a common point with the conclusion. The proposition in this case consists of two terms (subject and predicate), and it is a claim that can express truth or false. He quotes 10 categories and describes everything that could be the subject or predicate of a proposition (incident, quantity, quality, relationship, place, time, place, state, action, emotion). In other books by Organon, Aristotle considers effective discussion, possible reasoning (as opposed to one argument) and logical mistakes and building other subjects.
This section is presented in the form of a trinity, one of which leads to the other. Beginning with the first proposition (everyone is equal) a series of logical chains is created that leads to revolutionary rights and responsibility when the government harms the rights of the citizens. In this section, the signatory will list 27 complaints to the British royal family. These complaints are against the king ("He refused to agree with the law ..."), but many of them mention actions taken by the British Parliament or the Royal Governor. Many dissatisfactions are an example of British basic law violations such as "tax us without our consent" and "to deprive us of the benefits of the jury trial in many cases". Many historians believe that some dissatisfaction is an exaggerated propaganda (as in "a large group of officials", in reality there are about 50 men ordered to stop smuggling It means it)