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Logic --- Pragmatics --- Reasoning --- Discourse analysis --- Raisonnement --- Logique --- Analyse du discours --- LINGUISTIQUE HISTORIQUE --- FRANCAIS (L.) --- ARGUMENTATION
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Decision making --- Reasoning --- Management --- Prise de décision --- Argumentation --- Gestion --- Congresses --- Congrès --- Congresses. --- Prise de décision --- Congrès
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Logic --- Argumentation --- Deduction (Logic) --- Deductive logic --- Dialectic (Logic) --- Logic, Deductive --- Intellect --- Philosophy --- Psychology --- Science --- Reasoning --- Thought and thinking --- Methodology
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Argumentatieleer --- Argumentation [Théorie de l' ] --- Logic [Symbolic and mathematical ] --- Logica [Symbolische en wiskundige ] --- Logique symbolique et mathémathique --- Raisonnement --- Reasoning --- Redenering --- Descartes, René --- Science --- Methodology
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Part 1 Studies on set theory and the nature of logic: the iterative conception of set; reply to Charles Parsons' "Sets and Classes"; on second-order logic; to be is to be a value of a variable (or to be some values of some variables); nominalist platonism; iteration again; introductory note to Kurt Godel's "Some Basic Theorems on the Foundations of Mathematics and their Implications"; must we believe in set theory?. -- Part 2 Frege studies: Gottlob Frege and the foundations of arithmetic; reading the "Bergriffsschrift"; saving Frege from contradiction; the conspiracy of Frege's "Foundations of Arithmetic"; the standard of equality of numbers; whence the contradiction?; 1879?; the advantages of honest toil over theft; on the proof of Frege's theorem; Frege's theorem and the Peano Postulates; is Hume's principle analytic?; Die Grundlagen der Arithmetik 82-83 (Richard Heck); constructing Cantorian counterexamples. -- Part 3 Various logical studies and lighter papers: zooming down the slippery slope; don't eliminate cut; the justification of mathematical induction; a curious inference; a new proof of the Godel Incompleteness theorem; on "seeing" the truth of the Godel sentence; quotational amibguity; the hardest logical puzzle ever; Godel's Second Incompleteness theorem explained in words of one syllable.
Logic. --- Logic, Symbolic and mathematical. --- Mathematics --- Philosophy. --- Frege, Gottlob, --- Logic --- Argumentation --- Deduction (Logic) --- Deductive logic --- Dialectic (Logic) --- Logic, Deductive --- Intellect --- Philosophy --- Psychology --- Science --- Reasoning --- Thought and thinking --- Methodology
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Vérité --- Sciences --- Rationalisme --- Irrationalisme (Philosophie) --- Argumentation --- Raison --- Philosophie --- Science --- Decision making --- Analysis --- Decision making. --- Analysis. --- Philosophy --- History --- 20th century --- Science - Analysis --- Sciences - Philosophie --- Connaissance, theorie de la
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Reasoning. --- Persuasion (Rhetoric) --- Ad hominem arguments. --- Argumentation --- Ratiocination --- Reason --- Thought and thinking --- Judgment (Logic) --- Logic --- Rhetoric --- Forensics (Public speaking) --- Oratory --- Fallacies (Logic) --- Philosophical anthropology --- General ethics
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Because developments in informal logic have been based, for the most part, on idealized and abstract models, the tools available for argument analysis are not easily adapted to the needs of everyday argumentation. In this book Douglas Walton proposes a new and practical approach to argument analysis based on his theory that different standards for argument must apply in the case of different types of dialogue. By refining and extending the existing formal classifications of dialogue, Walton shows that each dialogue type, be it inquiry, negotiation, or critical discussion, has its own set of goals. He goes on to demonstrate that an argument can best be evaluated in terms of its contribution, positive or negative, to the goals of the particular dialogue it is meant to further. In this way he illustrates how argument can be brought into the service of many types of dialogue, and thus has valuable uses that go well beyond the mere settling of disputes and differences. By reaching back to the Aristotelian roots of logic as an applied, practical discipline and by formulating a new framework of rationality for evaluating arguments, Douglas Walton restores a much-needed balance to argument analysis. This book complements and extends his Argument Structure: A Pragmatic Theory (University of Toronto Press, 1996).
Reasoning. --- Logic. --- Dialogue. --- Argumentation --- Deduction (Logic) --- Deductive logic --- Dialectic (Logic) --- Logic, Deductive --- Intellect --- Philosophy --- Psychology --- Science --- Reasoning --- Thought and thinking --- Ratiocination --- Reason --- Judgment (Logic) --- Logic --- Dialog --- Drama --- Methodology
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The last work of the eminent philosopher Bimal Krishna Matilal, this book traces the origins of logical theory in India.
Logic --- History. --- Argumentation --- Deduction (Logic) --- Deductive logic --- Dialectic (Logic) --- Logic, Deductive --- Intellect --- Philosophy --- Psychology --- Science --- Reasoning --- Thought and thinking --- Methodology --- Philosophy, Indic --- Philosophy, indic
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Logic --- Philosophy of language --- French language --- Metalanguage. --- Persuasion (Rhetoric) --- Métalangage --- Argumentation --- Français (Langue) --- Rhetoric. --- Rhétorique --- Persuasion (Rhetoric). --- Métalangage --- Français (Langue) --- Rhétorique --- Metalanguage --- Second-order language --- Linguistic analysis (Linguistics) --- Rhetoric --- Forensics (Public speaking) --- Oratory
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