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Digital file of How to Think Logically, 2nd Edition for sale
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Category : Higher Education
IN THIS SECTION: 1.) BRIEF 2.) COMPREHENSIVE BRIEF TABLE OF CONTENTS PART I: THE BUILDING BLOCKS OF REASONING Chapter One What Is Logical Thinking? And Why Should We Care? Chapter Two Thinking Logically and Speaking One’s Mind Chapter Three The Virtues of Belief PART II: REASON AND ARGUMENT Chapter Four Tips for Argument Analysis Chapter Five Evaluating Deductive Arguments Chapter Six Analyzing Inductive Arguments PART III: INFORMAL FALLACIES Chapter Seven Some Ways an Argument Can Fail Chapter Eight Avoiding Ungrounded Assumptions Chapter Nine From Unclear Language to Unclear Reasoning Chapter Ten Avoiding Irrelevant Premises PART IV: MORE ON DEDUCTIVE REASONING Chapter Eleven Compound Propositions Chapter Twelve Checking the Validity of Propositional Arguments Chapter Thirteen Categorical Propositions and Immediate Inferences Chapter Fourteen Categorical Syllogisms Appendix: Summary of Informal Fallacies Answers to Selected Exercises Glossary/Index COMPREHENSIVE TABLE OF CONTENTS PART I: THE BUILDING BLOCKS OF REASONING Chapter One What Is Logical Thinking? And Why Should We Care? 1.1 The Study of Reasoning 1.2 Logic and Reasoning 1.3 What Arguments Are 1.4 Reconstructing Arguments 1.5 Arguments and Non-arguments 1.6 Chapter Summary 1.7 Key Words Chapter Two Thinking Logically and Speaking One’s Mind 2.1 Rational Acceptability 2.2 Beyond Rational Acceptability 2.3 From Mind to Language 2.4 Indirect Use and Figurative Language 2.5 Definition: An Antidote to Unclear Language 2.6 Chapter Summary 2.7 Key Words Chapter Three The Virtues of Belief 3.1 Belief, Disbelief, and Non-Belief 3.2 Beliefs’ Virtues and Vices 3.3 Accuracy and Truth 3.4 Reasonableness 3.5 Consistency 3.6 Conservatism and Revisability 3.7 Rationality vs. Irrationality 3.8 Chapter Summary 3.9 Key Words PART II: REASON AND ARGUMENT Chapter Four Tips for Argument Analysis 4.1 A Principled Way of Reconstructing Arguments 4.2 Missing Premises 4.3 Extended Arguments 4.4 Types of Reason 4.5 Norms and Argument 4.6 Chapter Summary 4.7 Key Words Chapter Five Evaluating Deductive Arguments 5.1 Validity 5.2 Soundness 5.3 Cogency 5.4 Chapter Summary 5.5 Key Words Chapter Six Analyzing Inductive Arguments 6.1 Reconstructing Inductive Arguments 6.2 Some Types of Inductive Argument 6.3 Evaluating Inductive Arguments 6.4 Chapter Summary 6.5 Key Words PART III: INFORMAL FALLACIES Chapter Seven Some Ways an Argument Can Fail 7.1 What Is a Fallacy? 7.2 Classification of Informal Fallacies 7.3 When Inductive Arguments Go Wrong 7.4 Chapter Summary 7.5 Key Words Chapter Eight Avoiding Ungrounded Assumptions 8.1 Fallacies of Presumption 8.2 Begging the Question 8.3 Begging-the-Question-Against 8.4 Complex Question 8.5 False Alternatives 8.6 Accident 8.7 Chapter Summary 8.8 Key Words Chapter Nine From Unclear Language to Unclear Reasoning 9.1 Unclear Language and Argument Failure 9.2 Semantic Unclarity 9.3 Vagueness 9.4 Ambiguity 9.5 Confused Predication 9.6 Chapter Summary 9.7 Key Words Chapter Ten Avoiding Irrelevant Premises 10.1 Fallacies of Relevance 10.2 Appeal to Pity 10.3 Appeal to Force 10.4 Appeal to Emotion 10.5 Ad Hominem 10.6 Beside the Point 10.7 Straw Man 10.8 Is the Appeal to Emotion Always Fallacious? 10.9 Chapter Summary 10.10 Key Words PART IV: MORE ON DEDUCTIVE REASONING Chapter Eleven Compound Propositions 11.1 Argument as a Relation Between Propositions 11.2 Simple and Compound Propositions 11.3 Symbolizing Compound Propositions 11.4 Defining Connectives with Truth Tables 11.5 Truth Tables for Compound Propositions 11.6 Chapter Summary 11.7 Key Words Chapter Twelve Checking the Validity of Propositional Arguments 12.1 Checking Validity with Truth Tables 12.2 Some Standard Argument Forms 12.3 Formal Fallacies 12.4 A Simplified Approach to Proofs of Validity 12.5 Chapter Summary 12.6 Key Words Chapter Thirteen Categorical Propositions and Immediate Inferences 13.1 What Is a Categorical Proposition? 13.2 Venn Diagrams for Categorical Propositions 13.3 The Square of Opposition 13.4 Other Immediate Inferences 13.5 Chapter Summary 13.6 Key Words Chapter Fourteen Categorical Syllogisms 14.1 What Is a Categorical Syllogism? 14.2 Syllogistic Argument Forms 14.3 Testing for Validity with Venn Diagrams 14.4 Distribution of Terms 14.5 Rules of Validity and Syllogistic Fallacies 14.6 Chapter Summary 14.7 Key Words Appendix: Summary of Informal Fallacies Answers to Selected Exercises Glossary/Index Table of Contents
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