Reasoning
'''Reasoning''' is the act of using reason to derive a conclusion from certain premises. There are two main methods to reach a conclusion. One is deductive, in which given true premises, the conclusion must follow (the conclusion cannot be false). This sort of reasoning is non-ampliative - it does not increase one's knowledge base, since the conclusion is self-contained in the premises. A classical example of deductive reasoning are syllogism.
- All humans are mortal
- Socrates is a man
- Therefore, Socrates is mortal
- The sun rose to the east every morning
- Therefore, the sun will rise to the east tomorrow.
See also
- Casuistry
- Evidence
- Objective reasoning
- Subjective reasoning
- Logic
- Inference
- Categorical syllogism
References
- Zarefsky, David. "Formal and Informal Argument: Lecture 3," Argumentation: The Study of Effective Reasoning Part I, The Teaching Company.
- Zarefsky, David. "Reasoning from Parts to Whole: Lecture 10," Argumentation: The Study of Effective Reasoning Part I, The Teaching Company.
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