Truth conditions define when a statement is true. They are fundamental to understanding meaning and are crucial for semantic analysis,…
Truth is a fundamental concept in logic and philosophy, representing the correspondence of statements, beliefs, or propositions to reality or…
Syncategorematic terms are words like conjunctions, prepositions, and quantifiers that lack independent meaning but are crucial for constructing meaningful expressions…
A syllogistic mood defines a syllogism's type based on the categorical propositions (universal affirmative, negative; particular affirmative, negative) of its…
Explore supposition in medieval logic, understanding how expressions relate to objects. It's not always about literal reference but about the…
The subject term is the element in a categorical proposition about which something is stated. It forms the first part…
Subcontraries are two particular statements in traditional logic that cannot both be false. They can both be true, but not…
Explore strong negation, differentiating between exclusion negation (A is not B, implying A is C) and choice negation (A is…
The Square of Opposition illustrates logical relations between A, E, I, and O categorical propositions. It details contradictions, contraries, subcontraries,…
A sorites series presents a sequence of propositions used to illustrate the sorites paradox. It challenges our understanding of vague…