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LEADER: 06293cam 2200589 a 4500
001 ocm55037026
003 OCoLC
005 20200328095346.0
008 040416s2005 njua b 001 0 eng
010 $a 2004040147
040 $aDLC$beng$cDLC$dBAKER$dNLGGC$dBTCTA$dYDXCP$dOCLCG$dDEBBG$dOCLCA$dOCLCF$dOCLCO$dOCLCQ$dI8M$dOCLCO$dOCLCQ$dMMV$dOCLCQ$dGILDS
019 $a1042101169
020 $a0131898345$q(student ;$qalk. paper)
020 $a9780131898349$q(student ;$qalk. paper)
020 $a0131332759$q(professional ;$qalk. paper)
020 $a9780131332751$q(professional ;$qalk. paper)
020 $a0131502506
020 $a9780131502505
035 $a(OCoLC)55037026$z(OCoLC)1042101169
050 00 $aBC108$b.C69 2005
082 00 $a160$222
084 $a08.33$2bcl
084 $aCC 2400$2rvk
100 1 $aCopi, Irving M.
245 10 $aIntroduction to logic /$cIrving M. Copi, Carl Cohen.
250 $a12th ed.
260 $aUpper Saddle River, N.J. :$bPearson/Prentice Hall,$c©2005.
300 $axx, 683 pages :$billustrations (some color) ;$c25 cm
336 $atext$btxt$2rdacontent
337 $aunmediated$bn$2rdamedia
338 $avolume$bnc$2rdacarrier
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
505 00 $tWalk-through of eLogic Online Tutorial --$gPart 1.$tLogic and Language --$gChapter 1.$tBasic Logical Concepts --$g1.1.$tWhat Logic Is --$g1.2.$tPropositions and Sentences --$g1.3.$tArguments, Premisses, and Conclusions --$g1.4.$tAnalyzing Arguments --$g1.5.$tRecognizing Arguments --$g1.6.$tArguments and Explanations --$g1.7.$tDeduction and Validity --$g1.8.$tInduction and Probability --$g1.9.$tValidity and Truth --$g1.10.$tComplex Argumentative Passages --$g1.11.$tReasoning --$tChallenge to the Reader --$gChapter 2.$tUses of Language --$g2.1.$tThree Basic Functions of Language --$g2.2.$tDiscourse Serving Multiple Functions --$g2.3.$tForms of Discourse --$g2.4.$tEmotive Words --$g2.5.$tKinds of Agreement and Disagreement --$g2.6.$tEmotively Neutral Language --$gChapter 3.$tDefinition --$g3.1.$tDisputes, Verbal Disputes, and Definitions --$g3.2.$tKinds of Definition and the Resolution of Disputes --$g3.3.$tExtension and Intension --$g3.4.$tExtensional Definitions --$g3.5.$tIntensional Definitions --$g3.6.$tRules for Definition by Genus and Difference --$gChapter 4.$tFallacies --$g4.1.$tWhat Is a Fallacy? --$g4.2.$tFallacies of Relevance --$g4.3.$tFallacies of Presumption --$g4.4.$tFallacies of Ambiguity --$gPart 2.$tDeduction --$gChapter 5.$tCategorical Propositions --$g5.1.$tTheory of Deduction --$g5.2.$tCategorical Propositions and Classes --$g5.3.$tQuality, Quantity, and Distribution --$g5.4.$tTraditional Square of Opposition --$g5.5.$tFurther Immediate Inferences --$g5.6.$tExistential Import and the Interpretation of Categorical Propositions --$g5.7.$tSymbolism and Diagrams for Categorical Propositions --$gChapter 6.$tCategorical Syllogisms --$g6.1.$tStandard-Form Categorical Syllogisms --$g6.2.$tFormal Nature of Syllogistic Argument --$g6.3.$tVenn Diagram Technique for Testing Syllogisms --$g6.4.$tSyllogistic Rules and Syllogistic Fallacies --$g6.5.$tExposition of the 15 Valid Forms of the Categorical Syllogism --$g6.6.$tDeduction of the 15 Valid Forms of the Categorical Syllogism --$gChapter 7.$tArguments in Ordinary Language --$g7.1.$tSyllogistic Arguments in Ordinary Language --$g7.2.$tReducing the Number of Terms in a Syllogistic Argument --$g7.3.$tTranslating Categorical Propositions into Standard Form --$g7.4.$tUniform Translation --$g7.5.$tEnthymemes --$g7.6.$tSorites --$g7.7.$tDisjunctive and Hypothetical Syllogisms --$g7.8.$tDilemma --$gChapter 8.$tSymbolic Logic --$g8.1.$tSymbolic Language of Modern Logic --$g8.2.$tSymbols for Conjunction, Negation, and Disjunction --$g8.3.$tConditional Statements and Material Implication --$g8.4.$tArgument Forms and Arguments --$g8.5.$tStatement Forms and Material Equivalence --$g8.6.$tLogical Equivalence --$g8.7.$tParadoxes of Material Implication --$g8.8.$tThree "Laws of Thought" --$gChapter 9.$tMethod of Deduction --$g9.1.$tFormal Proof of Validity --$g9.2.$tRule of Replacement --$g9.3.$tProof of Invalidity --$g9.4.$tInconsistency --$gChapter 10.$tQuantification Theory --$g10.1.$tSingular Propositions --$g10.2.$tQuantification --$g10.3.$tTraditional Subject-Predicate Propositions --$g10.4.$tProving Validity --$g10.5.$tProving Invalidity --$g10.6.$tAsyllogistic Inference --$gPart 3.$tInduction --$gChapter 11.$tAnalogy and Probable Inference --$g11.1.$tArgument by Analogy --$g11.2.$tAppraising Analogical Arguments --$g11.3.$tRefutation by Logical Analogy --$gChapter 12.$tCausal Connections: Mill's Methods of Experimental Inquiry --$g12.1.$tCause and Effect --$g12.2.$tMill's Methods --$g12.3.$tCritique of Mill's Methods --$gChapter 13.$tScience and Hypothesis --$g13.1.$tValues of Science --$g13.2.$tExplanations: Scientific and Unscientific --$g13.3.$tEvaluating Scientific Explanations --$g13.4.$tSeven Stages of Scientific Investigation --$g13.5.$tScientists in Action: The Pattern of Scientific Investigation --$g13.6.$tCrucial Experiments and Ad Hoc Hypotheses --$g13.7.$tClassification as Hypothesis --$gChapter 14.$tProbability --$g14.1.$tAlternative Conceptions of Probability --$g14.2.$tProbability Calculus --$g14.3.$tProbability of Joint Occurrences --$g14.4.$tProbability of Alternative Occurrences --$tChallenge to the Reader --$g14.5.$tExpected Value --$tChallenge to the Reader.
650 0 $aLogic$vTextbooks.
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650 17 $aLogica.$2gtt
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700 1 $aCohen, Carl,$d1931-
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948 $hNO HOLDINGS IN P4A - 133 OTHER HOLDINGS