Topics to be covered

Similar documents
MCQ IN TRADITIONAL LOGIC. 1. Logic is the science of A) Thought. B) Beauty. C) Mind. D) Goodness

An Introduction to. Formal Logic. Second edition. Peter Smith, February 27, 2019

Deccan Education Society s FERGUSSON COLLEGE, PUNE (AUTONOMOUS) SYLLABUS UNDER AUTONOMY FIRST YEAR B.A. LOGIC SEMESTER I

Logic: A Brief Introduction. Ronald L. Hall, Stetson University

Semantic Entailment and Natural Deduction

PHILOSOPHY 102 INTRODUCTION TO LOGIC PRACTICE EXAM 1. W# Section (10 or 11) 4. T F The statements that compose a disjunction are called conjuncts.

INTERMEDIATE LOGIC Glossary of key terms

Selections from Aristotle s Prior Analytics 41a21 41b5

Philosophy 12 Study Guide #4 Ch. 2, Sections IV.iii VI

Study Guides. Chapter 1 - Basic Training

Ling 98a: The Meaning of Negation (Week 1)

A. Problem set #3 it has been posted and is due Tuesday, 15 November

Philosophy 1100: Ethics

Logic: The Science that Evaluates Arguments

Lecture Notes on Classical Logic

Logic: Deductive and Inductive by Carveth Read M.A. Questions

GENERAL NOTES ON THIS CLASS

Artificial Intelligence: Valid Arguments and Proof Systems. Prof. Deepak Khemani. Department of Computer Science and Engineering

FACULTY OF ARTS B.A. Part II Examination,

Revisiting the Socrates Example

There are two common forms of deductively valid conditional argument: modus ponens and modus tollens.

North Orissa University Sriram Chandra Vihar Takatpur, Baripada Mayurbhanj

SYLLOGISTIC LOGIC CATEGORICAL PROPOSITIONS

Critical Thinking 5.7 Validity in inductive, conductive, and abductive arguments

In view of the fact that IN CLASS LOGIC EXERCISES

Announcements. CS243: Discrete Structures. First Order Logic, Rules of Inference. Review of Last Lecture. Translating English into First-Order Logic

What is an argument? PHIL 110. Is this an argument? Is this an argument? What about this? And what about this?

Day 3. Wednesday May 23, Learn the basic building blocks of proofs (specifically, direct proofs)

Instructor s Manual 1

Part II: How to Evaluate Deductive Arguments

PHI Introduction Lecture 4. An Overview of the Two Branches of Logic

B.A (PHILOSOPHY) SEM-III BA(Philosophy)-301 DEDUCTIVE LOGIC AND APPLIED ETHICS (OPT. I)

Informalizing Formal Logic

On Priest on nonmonotonic and inductive logic

Chapter 8 - Sentential Truth Tables and Argument Forms

Unit. Categorical Syllogism. What is a syllogism? Types of Syllogism

The Problem of Induction and Popper s Deductivism

LOGIC ANTHONY KAPOLKA FYF 101-9/3/2010

What is the Nature of Logic? Judy Pelham Philosophy, York University, Canada July 16, 2013 Pan-Hellenic Logic Symposium Athens, Greece

Proofs of Non-existence

Logic Appendix: More detailed instruction in deductive logic

Logic is the study of the quality of arguments. An argument consists of a set of

What are Truth-Tables and What Are They For?

LOGIC LECTURE #3: DEDUCTION AND INDUCTION. Source: A Concise Introduction to Logic, 11 th Ed. (Patrick Hurley, 2012)

Chapter 1. What is Philosophy? Thinking Philosophically About Life

Logic: Deductive and Inductive by Carveth Read M.A. CHAPTER IX CHAPTER IX FORMAL CONDITIONS OF MEDIATE INFERENCE

HOW TO ANALYZE AN ARGUMENT

Courses providing assessment data PHL 202. Semester/Year

CONTENTS A SYSTEM OF LOGIC

God has a mind- Romans 11:34 "who has known the mind of the Lord

1. To arrive at the truth we have to reason correctly. 2. Logic is the study of correct reasoning. B. DEDUCTIVE AND INDUCTIVE ARGUMENTS

Lecture 3 Arguments Jim Pryor What is an Argument? Jim Pryor Vocabulary Describing Arguments

Session 10 INDUCTIVE REASONONING IN THE SCIENCES & EVERYDAY LIFE( PART 1)

The way we convince people is generally to refer to sufficiently many things that they already know are correct.

(Refer Slide Time 03:00)

T. Parent. I shall explain these steps in turn. Let s consider the following passage to illustrate the process:

Predicate logic. Miguel Palomino Dpto. Sistemas Informáticos y Computación (UCM) Madrid Spain

INHISINTERESTINGCOMMENTS on my paper "Induction and Other Minds" 1

Dynamics of change in logic

PHI 1500: Major Issues in Philosophy

Chapter 9- Sentential Proofs

Also, in Argument #1 (Lecture 11, Slide 11), the inference from steps 2 and 3 to 4 is stated as:

Argumentative Analogy versus Figurative Analogy

Illustrating Deduction. A Didactic Sequence for Secondary School

A Judgmental Formulation of Modal Logic

Statements, Arguments, Validity. Philosophy and Logic Unit 1, Sections 1.1, 1.2

Introduction to Philosophy

VERITAS EVANGELICAL SEMINARY

MPS 17 The Structure of Persuasion Logos: reasoning, reasons, good reasons not necessarily about formal logic

CHAPTER THREE Philosophical Argument

Deductive Forms: Elementary Logic By R.A. Neidorf READ ONLINE

Russell: On Denoting

WHY SHOULD ANYONE BELIEVE ANYTHING AT ALL?

B.A./Alankar First Year

TWO VERSIONS OF HUME S LAW

Announcements. CS311H: Discrete Mathematics. First Order Logic, Rules of Inference. Satisfiability, Validity in FOL. Example.

Is the law of excluded middle a law of logic?

1. Introduction Formal deductive logic Overview

What could be some limitations to using fingerprints as evidence? Sep 2 12:58 PM

On The Logical Status of Dialectic (*) -Historical Development of the Argument in Japan- Shigeo Nagai Naoki Takato

SHORT ANSWER. Write the word or phrase that best completes each statement or answers the question.

PART III - Symbolic Logic Chapter 7 - Sentential Propositions

What is a logical argument? What is deductive reasoning? Fundamentals of Academic Writing

7.1. Unit. Terms and Propositions. Nature of propositions. Types of proposition. Classification of propositions

In this section you will learn three basic aspects of logic. When you are done, you will understand the following:

KRISHNA KANTA HANDIQUI STATE OPEN UNIVERSITY Patgaon, Ranigate, Guwahati SEMESTER: 1 PHILOSOPHY PAPER : 1 LOGIC: 1 BLOCK: 2

A BRIEF INTRODUCTION TO LOGIC FOR METAPHYSICIANS

Logic: A Brief Introduction

An alternative understanding of interpretations: Incompatibility Semantics

Phil 3304 Introduction to Logic Dr. David Naugle. Identifying Arguments i

The Relationship between the Truth Value of Premises and the Truth Value of Conclusions in Deductive Arguments

prohibition, moral commitment and other normative matters. Although often described as a branch

PHIL 115: Philosophical Anthropology. I. Propositional Forms (in Stoic Logic) Lecture #4: Stoic Logic

Chapter 1. Introduction. 1.1 Deductive and Plausible Reasoning Strong Syllogism

Semantic Foundations for Deductive Methods

RASHTRASANT TUKDOJI MAHARAJ NAGPUR UNIVERSITY, NAGPUR SYLLABUS B. A. (C.B.S) SUBJECT : PHILOSOPHY (U.G.)

Unit 4. Reason as a way of knowing. Tuesday, March 4, 14

Deduction. Of all the modes of reasoning, deductive arguments have the strongest relationship between the premises

IS THE SYLLOGISTIC A LOGIC? it is not a theory or formal ontology, a system concerned with general features of the

A Puzzle about Knowing Conditionals i. (final draft) Daniel Rothschild University College London. and. Levi Spectre The Open University of Israel

Transcription:

Department of Philosophy : Nizam college, OU Sub: Logic Number of Hours 1. What is Logic 2 2. Branches of logic (Philosophy) 2 3. Deductive Logic 2 4. Induction 2 5. Nature of Logic 2 6. Scope of Logic 2 7. Logic as science of science 2 and Art s of Art s 8. Logic of positive science 2 9. Logic of Normative science 3 Reasoning 10. Fundamental laws of thought 3 11. Law of preposition 3 12. Law of contradiction 2 13. Law of excluded 2 14. Middle reason 2 15. Law of sufficient reason 3 16. Proporition Induction 2 17. Distiction between a proposition 3 And gramatical sentence 18. Kinds of proposition 2 19. Clarification of pro position 5 20. Defination of opposition 3 21. Opposition of proposition 2 22. Square of opposition in A.E.I.O 3 23. Syllagism Introduction 3 24. Chareterision of syllogism 2 25. Kinds of syllogism 2 26. General rules of syllogism 2 27. Catergorical syllogism 2 28. Moods 3 29. Study of figures 4

DEPORTMET OF PHILOPHY : NIZAM COLLAGE, OU TOPICS OF COVERED Sub:Logic Sem- 4 Topics to covered Num of periods 1. Introduction to Logic 2 2. Inductive Logic 2 3. Nature and history of inductive Logic 3 4. Inductive Method 2 5. Inductiive method and science 3 6. Kinds of Induction 3 7. Meaning of Hypothesis 2 8. Origin of Hypotheism 3 9. Forms of Hypotheism 3 10.Condition of valid Hypotheism 3 11.Proofs of Hypotheism 3 12.Observation Eupersment 3 13.role of observation in Science 4 14.Kinds of Observation 3 15.Advantage of Observation 2 16.defination of Expeirment 2 17. Nature of experiment in Science 3 18. Advantage of experiment 2 19. Symbolic Logic 2 20. Uses of symbolic Logic 3 21. Symbolic Logic it s organ and development 3 22. Modern classification of proportion 3 23. Truth Table 2 24. Negation 2 25. Hypothetical Altenative 3 26. Disjunction and conjunction 4 27. Inferance and analogy 3 28. Meaning and definition of analogy 2 29. Nature of Analogy 2 30. Analogy or scienlific induction 3 31. Analogy and simple arguement 2 32. Strength of Analogical argument 2

Department of Philosophy : Nizam college, OU Sub: Logic Number of Hours 30. What is Logic 2 31. Branches of logic (Philosophy) 2 32. Deductive Logic 2 33. Induction 2 34. Nature of Logic 2 35. Scope of Logic 2 36. Logic as science of science 2 and Art s of Art s 37. Logic of positive science 2 38. Logic of Normative science 3 Reasoning 39. Fundamental laws of thought 3 40. Law of preposition 3 41. Law of contradiction 2 42. Law of excluded 2 43. Middle reason 2 44. Law of sufficient reason 3 45. Proporition Induction 2 46. Distiction between a proposition 3 And gramatical sentence 47. Kinds of proposition 2 48. Clarification of pro position 5 49. Defination of opposition 3 50. Opposition of proposition 2 51. Square of opposition in A.E.I.O 3 52. Syllagism Introduction 3 53. Chareterision of syllogism 2 54. Kinds of syllogism 2 55. General rules of syllogism 2 56. Catergorical syllogism 2 57. Moods 3 58. Study of figures 4

DEPORTMET OF PHILOPHY : NIZAM COLLAGE, OU TOPICS OF COVERED Sub:Logic Sem- 4 Topics to covered Num of periods 1. Introduction to Logic 2 2. Inductive Logic 2 3. Nature and history of inductive Logic 3 10. Inductive Method 2 11. Inductiive method and science 3 12. Kinds of Induction 3 13. Meaning of Hypothesis 2 14. Origin of Hypotheism 3 15. Forms of Hypotheism 3 10.Condition of valid Hypotheism 3 11.Proofs of Hypotheism 3 12.Observation Eupersment 3 13.role of observation in Science 4 14.Kinds of Observation 3 15.Advantage of Observation 2 16.defination of Expeirment 2 17. Nature of experiment in Science 3 18. Advantage of experiment 2 19. Symbolic Logic 2 20. Uses of symbolic Logic 3 21. Symbolic Logic it s organ and development 3 22. Modern classification of proportion 3 23. Truth Table 2 24. Negation 2 25. Hypothetical Altenative 3 26. Disjunction and conjunction 4 27. Inferance and analogy 3 28. Meaning and definition of analogy 2 29. Nature of Analogy 2 30. Analogy or scienlific induction 3 31. Analogy and simple arguement 2 32. Strength of Analogical argument 2

Department of Philosophy : Nizam college, OU Sub: Logic Number of Hours 59. What is Logic 2 60. Branches of logic (Philosophy) 2 61. Deductive Logic 2 62. Induction 2 63. Nature of Logic 2 64. Scope of Logic 2 65. Logic as science of science 2 and Art s of Art s 66. Logic of positive science 2 67. Logic of Normative science 3 Reasoning 68. Fundamental laws of thought 3 69. Law of preposition 3 70. Law of contradiction 2 71. Law of excluded 2 72. Middle reason 2 73. Law of sufficient reason 3 74. Proporition Induction 2 75. Distiction between a proposition 3 And gramatical sentence 76. Kinds of proposition 2 77. Clarification of pro position 5 78. Defination of opposition 3 79. Opposition of proposition 2 80. Square of opposition in A.E.I.O 3 81. Syllagism Introduction 3 82. Chareterision of syllogism 2 83. Kinds of syllogism 2 84. General rules of syllogism 2 85. Catergorical syllogism 2 86. Moods 3 87. Study of figures 4

DEPORTMET OF PHILOPHY : NIZAM COLLAGE, OU TOPICS OF COVERED Sub:Logic Sem- 4 Topics to covered Num of periods 1. Introduction to Logic 2 2. Inductive Logic 2 3. Nature and history of inductive Logic 3 16. Inductive Method 2 17. Inductiive method and science 3 18. Kinds of Induction 3 19. Meaning of Hypothesis 2 20. Origin of Hypotheism 3 21. Forms of Hypotheism 3 10.Condition of valid Hypotheism 3 11.Proofs of Hypotheism 3 12.Observation Eupersment 3 13.role of observation in Science 4 14.Kinds of Observation 3 15.Advantage of Observation 2 16.defination of Expeirment 2 17. Nature of experiment in Science 3 18. Advantage of experiment 2 19. Symbolic Logic 2 20. Uses of symbolic Logic 3 21. Symbolic Logic it s organ and development 3 22. Modern classification of proportion 3 23. Truth Table 2 24. Negation 2 25. Hypothetical Altenative 3 26. Disjunction and conjunction 4 27. Inferance and analogy 3 28. Meaning and definition of analogy 2 29. Nature of Analogy 2 30. Analogy or scienlific induction 3 31. Analogy and simple arguement 2 32. Strength of Analogical argument 2

Department of Philosophy : Nizam college, OU Sub: Logic Number of Hours 88. What is Logic 2 89. Branches of logic (Philosophy) 2 90. Deductive Logic 2 91. Induction 2 92. Nature of Logic 2 93. Scope of Logic 2 94. Logic as science of science 2 and Art s of Art s 95. Logic of positive science 2 96. Logic of Normative science 3 Reasoning 97. Fundamental laws of thought 3 98. Law of preposition 3 99. Law of contradiction 2 100. Law of excluded 2 101. Middle reason 2 102. Law of sufficient reason 3 103. Proporition Induction 2 104. Distiction between a proposition 3 And gramatical sentence 105. Kinds of proposition 2 106. Clarification of pro position 5 107. Defination of opposition 3 108. Opposition of proposition 2 109. Square of opposition in A.E.I.O 3 110. Syllagism Introduction 3 111. Chareterision of syllogism 2 112. Kinds of syllogism 2 113. General rules of syllogism 2 114. Catergorical syllogism 2 115. Moods 3 116. Study of figures 4

DEPORTMET OF PHILOPHY : NIZAM COLLAGE, OU TOPICS OF COVERED Sub:Logic Sem- 4 Topics to covered Num of periods 1. Introduction to Logic 2 2. Inductive Logic 2 3. Nature and history of inductive Logic 3 22. Inductive Method 2 23. Inductiive method and science 3 24. Kinds of Induction 3 25. Meaning of Hypothesis 2 26. Origin of Hypotheism 3 27. Forms of Hypotheism 3 10.Condition of valid Hypotheism 3 11.Proofs of Hypotheism 3 12.Observation Eupersment 3 13.role of observation in Science 4 14.Kinds of Observation 3 15.Advantage of Observation 2 16.defination of Expeirment 2

Department of Philosophy : Nizam college, OU Sub: Logic Number of Hours 117. What is Logic 2 118. Branches of logic (Philosophy) 2 119. Deductive Logic 2 120. Induction 2 121. Nature of Logic 2 122. Scope of Logic 2 123. Logic as science of science 2 and Art s of Art s 124. Logic of positive science 2 125. Logic of Normative science 3 Reasoning 126. Fundamental laws of thought 3 127. Law of Iduhli 3 128. Law of contradiction 2 129. Law of excluded 2 130. Middle reason 2 131. Law of sufficient reason 3 132. Proporition Induction 2 133. Dirtiction between a proposition 3 And grarnatical sentence 134. Kinds of proposition 2 135. Clarification of pro position 5 136. Defination of opposition 3 137. Opposition of proposition 2 138. Square of opposition in A.E.I.O 3 139. Sullagism Introduction 3 140. Chareterision of syllogism 2 141. Krnds of syllogism 2 142. General rnles of syllogism 2 143. Catergorical syllogism 2 144. Moods 3 145. Study of figures 4

DEPORTMET OF PHILOPHY : NIZAM COLLAGE, OU TOPICS OF COVERED Sub:Logic Sem- 4 Topics to covered Num of periods 1. Introduction to Logic 2 2. Induclie Logic 2 3. Nature and history of indueive Logic 3 28. Induclive Method 2 29. Induclive method and science 3 30. Kinds of Induction 3 31. Meaning of Hypothenis 2 32. Oviginm of Hypothesm 3 33. Forms of Hypothsn 3 10.Condition of valid Hypothesh 3 11.Proofs of Hypothesm 3 12.Observation Eupersment 3 13.Vole of observation in Science 4 14.Kinds of Observation 3 15.Advantage of Observation 2 16.Pefination of Expeirment 2 17. Nature of experiment in Science 3 18. Advantage of experiment 2 19. Symbolic Logic 2 20. Uses of symbolic Logic 3 21. Symbolic Logic it s orgim and development 3 22. Modem clamification of proportion 3 23. Truth Table 2 24. Negation 2 25. Hypothetical Altenaline 3 26. Dinjunclion and canjunction 4 27. Inferane and analogy 3 28. Meaning and definition of analogy 2 29. Nature of Analogy 2 30. Analogy or scienlific induction 3 31. Analogy and simple chumaration 2 32. Sfrengh of Analogical argument 2 17. Nature of experiment in Science 3 18. Advantage of experiment 2 19. Symbolic Logic 2 20. Uses of symbolic Logic 3 21. Symbolic Logic it s organ and development 3 22. Modern classification of proportion 3 23. Truth Table 2

24. Negation 2 25. Hypothetical Altenative 3 26. Disjunction and conjunction 4 27. Inferance and analogy 3 28. Meaning and definition of analogy 2 29. Nature of Analogy 2 30. Analogy or scienlific induction 3 31. Analogy and simple arguement 2 32. Strength of Analogical argument 2