Composition and Critical Thinking II Crossword
                                              
                                              
                                              
                                              
                                              
                                              
                                              
                                              
                                              
                                              
                                              
                                              
                                              
                                              
                                              
                                              
                                              
                                              
                                              
                                              
                                              
                                              
                                              
                                              
                                              
                                              
                                              
                                              
 
 
Down: 1) Syllogism in which the conclusion and both of the premises are hypothetical propositions. 4) A valid mixed hypothetical syllogism in which the categorical premise affirms the antecedent of the hypothetical premise and the conclusions affirms the consequent. 5) A proposition used in an argument to provide evidence for another proposition (the conclusion).6) An argument in which the premises appear to support the conclusion but actually provided little or no support. 7) The degree to which the premises of an inductive argument support the conclusion.8) The "term" component in a hypothetical proposition.10) A premise that is assumed by an argument but is not stated.13) The property of a deductive argument in which it is impossible for the premises to be true and the conclusion false 15) A statement that identifies the referents of a concept by specifying the genus they belong to and the essential characteristics that distingush those referents from other member of the genus.16) In a categorical syllogism the term that occurs in the subject of the conclusion.18) In a categorical syllogism the term that appears in both premises and links together the major and minor terms. 21) A categorical syllogism with an unstated premise or conclusion.23) The property of a deductive argument that is valid and whose premises are true. Across: 2) An invalid mixed hypothetical syllogism in which the categorical premise affirms the consequent of the hypothetical premise and the conclusion affirms the antecedent. 3) A valid mixed hypothetical syllogism in which the categorical premise denies the consequent of the hypothetical premise and the conclusion denies the antecedent 9) A deductive argument containing two categorical premises, a categorical conclusion and three terms- major minor and middle with each term occurring in two propositions. 11) A class of things regarded as having various subcategories (its species).12) A deductive argument with two premises and a conclusion. 14) a syllogism with a hypothetical premise a categorical premise and a categorical conclusion. 17) An argument that attempts to show its conclusion is supported by the premises even though the conclusion amplifies what the premises state. 19) The element in a definition that specifies the attribute(s) distinguishing a species from other species of the same genus. 20) An invalid mixed hypothetical syllogism in which the categorical premise denies the antecedent of the hypothetical premise and the conclusion denies the consequent.22) A proposition whose truth an argument seeks to establish. 24) An argument that attempts to show that its conclusion makes explicit the information implicit in the premises so that the conclusion must be true if the premises are 25) A unit of reasoning in which one or more propositions (the premises) purpose to provide evidence for the truth of another proposition (the conclusion). 26) In a categorical syllogism the term that occurs in the predicate of the conclusion. 27) The "if" component in a hypothetical proposition. 28) The property of an inductive argument that is strong and whose premises are true.
 

 

Create your own Crossword Puzzle for Free!
 Show Errors as I Type