Critical Thinking

Descripción

Flash cards to help study for key terms in the critical thinking section, Unit 1, of the ATAR Philosophy Course, Year 11 2017.
Lucy Cerys
Fichas por Lucy Cerys, actualizado hace más de 1 año
Lucy Cerys
Creado por Lucy Cerys hace más de 7 años
12
0

Resumen del Recurso

Pregunta Respuesta
Philosophy Study of fundamental nature of knowledge, reality, and existence.
Metaphysics Explores fundamental nature of reality.
Ethics/Morals/Politics Deals with moral responsibility amd human thought/activity.
Epistemology Theory of knowledge; possibility of something and justified belief vs opinion.
Logic Study of argument structure and principles of reasoning.
Theory of Ultimate Reality Absolute nature of all things.
Proposition Meaning of a sentence which expresses a belief.
Description Gives information about topic.
Explanation Truth of statement already accepted but tries to say how it came about.
Narrative A story.
Argument Consists of premise, inference and conclusion.
Premise Reason/s supporting claim.
Inference Move in reasoning from premise/s to conclusion.
Conclusion Claim trying to be proved.
Argument Map Visual representation of logical structure of argument.
Co-premise Premises which rely on each other to sufficiently support the conclusion.
Deductive If premises are accepted then conclusion must be true.
Inductive Premises do not necessarily infer conclusion.
Modus Ponens If P, then Q. P. Therefore Q.
Modus Tollens If P, then Q. Not Q. Therefore, not P.
Affirming the Consequent If P then Q. Q. Therefore P.
Denying the Antecedent If P then Q. Not P. Therefore, not Q.
Conditional If P then Q: statement that does not assert P or Q but establishes connection.
Antecedent Statement that follows 'if' in conditional: P (or something that comes first).
Consequent Statement that follows 'then' in conditional: Q (or something that comes after).
Valid Deductive argument (if premises true, impossible for conclusions to be false).
Sound Valid argument with true premises.
Cogent Argument with rationally acceptable premises that support conclusion.
Strong Inference Premises provide extremely strong likelihood that conclusion is true.
a Priori Claims knowable before and independent of sense-experience.
a Posteriori Claims are only knowable after or on basis of sense-experience.
Rationalism Argues it is possible for us to know facts about the world outside our own mind; a priori.
Empiricism Argues all knowledge of world outside the mind is based on sense-experience; a posteriori.
Analytic Proposition is true or false simply by virtue of meaning of words.
Synthetic True or false not simply through meaning of words but through fact.
Mostrar resumen completo Ocultar resumen completo

Similar

Breakdown of Philosophy
rlshindmarsh
Who did what now?...Ancient Greek edition
Chris Clark
Reason and Experience Plans
rlshindmarsh
The Cosmological Argument
Summer Pearce
AS Philosophy Exam Questions
Summer Pearce
Philosophy of Art
mccurryby
"The knower's perspective is essential in the pursuit of knowledge." To what extent do you agree?
nataliaapedraza
The Ontological Argument
daniella0128
Religious Experience
alexandramchugh9
Chapter 6: Freedom vs. Determinism Practice Quiz
Kristen Gardner
Environmental Ethics
Jason Edwards-Suarez