- Arts & Culture 5945
- Business & Economics 689
- Computers 315
- Dictionaries & Encyclopedias 81
- Education & Science 76124
- Abstracts 252
- Astrology 4
- Astronomy 1
- Biology 8
- Chemistry 2330
- Coursework 15648
- Culture 9
- Diplomas 411
- Drawings 574
- Ecology 6
- Economy 82
- English 76
- Ethics, Aesthetics 3
- For Education Students 17613
- Foreign Languages 11
- Geography 3
- Geology 1
- History 89
- Maps & Atlases 5
- Mathematics 13871
- Musical Literature 2
- Pedagogics 19
- Philosophy 23
- Physics 14874
- Political Science 5
- Practical Work 101
- Psychology 60
- Religion 4
- Russian and culture of speech 8
- School Textbooks 7
- Sexology 42
- Sociology 9
- Summaries, Cribs 87
- Test Answers 150
- Tests 9242
- Textbooks for Colleges and Universities 32
- Theses 24
- To Help Graduate Students 14
- To Help the Entrant 37
- Vetting 364
- Works 13
- Информатика 10
- Engineering 3062
- Fiction 696
- House, Family & Entertainment 107
- Law 132
- Website Promotion 71
Control Logic Option 4
Uploaded: 12.10.2023
Content: 30814083653363.docx 29,12 kB
50 $ | the discount is | 20% |
25 $ | the discount is | 10% |
Product description
1. Define the following concepts:
a) textbook;
b) father;
c) house.
2. In the following judgments, determine the subject, predicate and connective, and also bring them to the canonical form:
a) the wolf is not a sheep’s friend;
b) judicial reforms of 1861 transformed the entire justice system in Russia;
c) some of the paintings by young artists were sold at auction.
3. Identify simple initial judgments in a complex judgment and bring the complex judgment to a symbolic form.
a) the doors were with or without stained glass;
b) the job of every citizen is to protect nature, preserve its wealth;
c) amnesty can be general or partial.
4. Construct truth tables for the following complex judgments, presented in symbolic form:
5. Draw a conclusion through transformation from the following premises:
a) all roads lead to Rome;
b) not all crimes are committed with malicious intent;
c) no one will embrace the immensity.
6. Draw a conclusion by means of reversal from the following premises:
a) all roads lead to Rome;
b) not all crimes are committed with malicious intent;
c) no one will embrace the immensity.
7. Draw a conclusion by contrasting the predicate from the following premises:
a) all roads lead to Rome;
b) not all crimes are committed with malicious intent;
c) no one will embrace the immensity.
8. Draw a conclusion according to the rules of a simple categorical syllogism (if possible) from the following premises. If it is impossible to draw a conclusion, indicate the reason.
a) no medicine tastes good. Alexandria leaf - medicine;
b) all British people are brave. No sailor is a braggart;
c) some pigs are wild. All pigs are fat.
Additional information
TASK AS A GIFT
8. Draw a conclusion according to the rules of a simple categorical syllogism (if possible) from the following premises. If it is impossible to draw a conclusion, indicate the reason.
a) no medicine tastes good. Alexandria leaf - medicine;
b) all British people are brave. No sailor is a braggart;
c) some pigs are wild. All pigs are fat.
Solution:
A) Alexandria leaf is unpleasant to the taste.
B) The conclusion cannot be drawn. Error of excluded terms of the same sign, the existence of which is not asserted.
C) Some wild animals are fat.
Feedback
0Period | |||
1 month | 3 months | 12 months | |
0 | 0 | 0 | |
0 | 0 | 0 |