History & Society
syllogism
logic
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External Websites
- Literary Devices - Syllogism
- University of Central Florida Pressbooks - Relating the Conceptual and Concrete
- Frontiers - Communication, Goals, and Counterexamples in Syllogistic Reasoning
- Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy - Medieval Theories of the Syllogism
- College of Western Idaho Pressbooks - Deductive Logic IV: Quantification and Predicate Logic
- Academia - Syllogism
Category:
History & Society
- Key People:
- John Venn
- Christine Ladd-Franklin
- Related Topics:
- mood
- sorites
- enthymeme
- figure
- major term
- On the Web:
- Literary Devices - Syllogism (Apr. 05, 2024)
syllogism, in logic, a valid deductive argument having two premises and a conclusion. The traditional type is the categorical syllogism in which both premises and the conclusion are simple declarative statements that are constructed using only three simple terms between them, each term appearing twice (as a subject and as a predicate): “All men are mortal; no gods are mortal; therefore no men are gods.” The argument in such syllogisms is valid by virtue of the fact that it would not be possible to assert the premises and to deny the conclusion without contradicting oneself.