Both premises and conclusion of an argument are _______. A) Commands B) Propositions C) Exclamations  D) Questions.  

1 Answer

Answer :

B) Propositions 

Related questions

Description : Propositions which supports the conclusion of an argument are called  A) Inferences B) Premises C) Terms D) Concepts.

Last Answer : B) Premises 

Description : A deductive argument is sound if and only if it is A) valid and all its premises are true B) invalid and all its premises are true C) is valid and one of the premise is false D) is valid and its conclusion is false. 

Last Answer : A) valid and all its premises are true 

Description : The claim of an inductive argument is that premises provide---------- for the conclusion. A) invalidity B) absolute evidence C) no evidence D) some evidence 

Last Answer : D) some evidence 

Description : If it is possible for the premises of a deductive argument to be true and its conclusion to be false, that argument is A) Valid B) Invalid C) Indescribable D) Sound.  

Last Answer : B) Invalid

Description : The falsehood of a valid deductive argument’s conclusion guarantees that A) the argument is sound B) atleast one of the premise is false C) premises are true D) the validity is uncertain. 

Last Answer : B) atleast one of the premise is false 

Description : The relationship between premises and conclusion in a deductive argument is--. A) Cause-Effect B) Analytic-Synthetic C) A priori-A posterior D) Implication-Entailment. 

Last Answer : D) Implication-Entailment. 

Description : The premises provide conclusive grounds for the conclusion in ----------- argument. A) Inductive B) Deductive C) Fallacious D) Intuitive

Last Answer : B) Deductive

Description : A ___________ is a mixed syllogism whose major premise is a disjunctive propositions and whose minor premise and conclusion are categorical propositions. A) Categorical syllogism B) Hypothetical syllogism C) Disjunctive syllogism D) Dilemma. 

Last Answer : C) Disjunctive syllogism  

Description : A syllogism in which the major premise is a hypothetical proposition, the minor and the conclusion are categorical propositions is a_______. A) Categorical syllogism B) Hypothetical syllogism C) Disjunctive syllogism D) Dilemma. 

Last Answer : B) Hypothetical syllogism 

Description : A _________ is a form of syllogism determined by the qulity and quantity of the three constituent propositions. A) Mood B) Figure C) Middle termed D) Conclusion. 

Last Answer : A) Mood 

Description : From two ________ premises no conclusion is possible. A) universal B) affirmative C) negative D) categorical  

Last Answer : C) negative

Description : Two_______ premises yield no valid conclusion. A) universal B) particular C) affirmative D) categorical. 

Last Answer : B) particular 

Description : That term which occurs in the premises and not in the conclusion is A) Major term B) Minor term C) Copula D) Middle term. 

Last Answer : D) Middle term. 

Description : In induction, reasoning proceeds to a conclusion that is ---------- to the scope of its premises.   A) confined B) not confined C) narrow D) restricted.

Last Answer : B) not confined 

Description : That proposition which is affirmed on the basis of premises is called A) Term B) Concept C) Idea D) Conclusion.

Last Answer :  D) Conclusion. 

Description : A valid deductive argument with true premises is called a ------ argument. A) sound B) unsound C) fallacious D) dilemma.  

Last Answer : A) sound 

Description : Universal or Particular is the classification of the propositions on the basis of _______. A) Quantity B) Quality C) Validity D) Truth. 

Last Answer : A) Quantity 

Description : Contrary propositions cannot both be ________. A) true B) false C) true and false D) doubtful 

Last Answer : A) true

Description :  ___________ is the relation between two propositions having the same subject but differing in both quality and quantity. A) Contrary opposition B) Contradictory opposition C) Subalternation D) Sub- contrary. 

Last Answer : B) Contradictory opposition

Description :  ______ opposition is the relation between two propositions having the same subject and predicate but differing in quantity only. A) Contrary B) Contradictory C) Subaltern D) Sub-contrary. 

Last Answer : C) Subaltern

Description : The relation between two particular propositions having the same subject and predicate but differing in quality is _________opposition. A) contrary B) Contradictory C) subalternation D) sub-contrary. 

Last Answer : D) sub-contrary. 

Description : __________ is the relation between two universal propositions having the same subject but differing in quality only. A) Contrary opposition B) Contradictory opposition C) Subaltern D) Sub- contrary.

Last Answer : A) Contrary opposition 

Description : Individual propositions are to be regarded as___________. A) Universal B) Particular C) Negative D) Fallacy. 

Last Answer : A) Universal 

Description : Affirmative or Negative is the classification of propositions on the basis of _________. A) Quantity B) Quality C) Validity D) Truth. 

Last Answer : B) Quality 

Description : The two kinds of propositions are A) Connotative – Denotative B) Abstract – Concrete C) Categorical – Conditional D) Good – Bad

Last Answer : C) Categorical – Conditional 

Description : Validity or Invalidity may be predicated of ---------. A) Deductive arguments B) propositions C) terms D) concepts. 

Last Answer : A) Deductive arguments 

Description : Truth or Falsehood may be predicated of --------. A) arguments B) inferences C) propositions D) syllogism 

Last Answer :  C) propositions

Description : Only--------------- sentences can become propositions. A) Indicative B) Exclamatory C) Interrogative D) Imperative

Last Answer :  A) Indicative  

Description : The process by which one proposition is arrived at on the basis of other propositions is called-----------. A) Term B) Concept C) Inference D) Connotation.

Last Answer :  C) Inference 

Description :  __________ fallacy occurs when a term is used in two different meanings in the syllogism.  A) Undistribute middle B) Two negative premises C) Equivocation D) Illicit major.

Last Answer : C) Equivocation 

Description : That cannot advance beyond the scope of its premises is A) Induction B) Material logic C) Deduction D) Dilemma. 

Last Answer : C) Deduction 

Description : If one premise is negative the conclusion must be________. A) Negative B) Positive C) Both negative and positive D) Neither negative nor positive. 

Last Answer : A) Negative 

Description : A dilemma is complex when the conclusion is __________ proposition. A) implicative B) categorical C) disjunctive D) negative 

Last Answer : C) disjunctive

Description : A dilemma is simple when the conclusion is__________ proposition. A) disjunctive B) implicative C) negative D) categorical 

Last Answer : D) categorical 

Description : If one premise is particular the conclusion must be_________. A) Universal B) Negative C) Affirmative D) Particular. 

Last Answer : D) Particular.  

Description : The fallacy occurs when the minor term which is not distributed in the minor premise but distributed in the conclusion is A) Ambiguous minor B) Undistributed middle C) Equivocation D) Illicit minor. 

Last Answer : D) Illicit minor. 

Description : The fallacy occurs when the major term which is not distributed in the major premise but distributed in the conclusion is A) Ambiguous major B) Undistributed middle C) Illicit major D) Equivocation. 

Last Answer : C) Illicit major

Description : ____________ is a fallacy which occurs when in a syllogism the minor term means one thing in the minor premise and quite another in the conclusion. A) Fallacy of ambiguous major B) Fallacy of ambiguous minor C) Fallacy of ambiguous middle D) Fallacy of undistributed middle. 

Last Answer :  B) Fallacy of ambiguous minor

Description :  ____________ is a fallacy which occurs when a syllogism uses its major term in one sense in the premise and in a different sense in the conclusion. A) Fallacy of ambiguous major B) Fallacy of ambiguous minor C) Fallacy of ambiguous middle D) Fallacy of undistributed middle

Last Answer : A) Fallacy of ambiguous major

Description : The minor term is the _______________. A) subject of the conclusion B) predicate of the conclusion C) subject of the major premise D) predicate of the major premise.

Last Answer : A) subject of the conclusion

Description : The major term is the _______________. A) subject of the conclusion B) copula C) predicate of the conclusion D) predicate of the minor premise.

Last Answer :  B) copula 

Description : The process of passing directly from a single proposition to a conclusion is A) Immediate inference B) Mediate inference C) Definition D) Classification. 

Last Answer :  A) Immediate inference 

Description : A single ------ is enough to prove the inductive conclusion false. A) intuition B) Assumption C) counter-example D) concept. 

Last Answer : C) counter-example

Description : In inductive reasoning the conclusion is -------. A) Probable B) Certain C) Definite D) Predictable.

Last Answer : A) Probable 

Description : determine whether it is argument or not argument Write the premises and conclusion separately?

Last Answer : 1) economics should never have sought to divorce itself from the other social sciences and can advance only in conjunction with them.2) ... speculation 3) Economists are all too often preoccupied with petty mathematical problems of interest only to themselves .?

Description : Given below are some characteristics of reasoning. Select the code that states a characteristic which is not of deductive reasoning: (A) The conclusion must be based on observation and experiment ( ... must follow from the premise/premises necessarily (D) The argument may be valid or invalid

Last Answer : (A) The conclusion must be based on observation and experiment

Description : Select the code which is not correct :  An analogical argument is strengthened by (A) increasing the number of entities. (B) increasing the number of similar respects. (C) reducing the claim made earlier stronger. (D) making the conclusion stronger when premises remain unchanged.

Last Answer : (D) making the conclusion stronger when premises remain unchanged. 

Description : Select the code which states the condition of an invalid deductive argument : (A) All the premises are true but the conclusion is false. (B) Some of the premises are true but the conclusion is false. ... the conclusion is also false. (D) All the premises are true and the conclusion is also true.

Last Answer : (A) All the premises are true but the conclusion is false. 

Description : Which one among the following is not a characteristic of a deductive type of argument ? (A) The conclusion follows from the premise/premises necessarily. (B) The argument admits degree of complexity. ( ... provides us knowledge about matters of fact. (D) The argument must be either valid or invalid.

Last Answer : (C) The argument provides us knowledge about matters of fact.

Description : Select the code, which is not correct in the context of deductive argument with two premises: (A) An argument with one true premise, one false premise and a false conclusion may be valid. (B) An argument ... may be valid. (D) An argument with two false premises and a false conclusion may be valid. 

Last Answer : (B) An argument with two true premises and a false conclusion may be valid.