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REASONING |
Logic |
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REASON |
Logic |
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REASONED |
Used logic |
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SUDOKO |
Logic puzzle |
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LOGICS |
See Logic. |
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RATIONALISE |
Apply logic to |
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SUDOKU |
Number logic puzzle |
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PHYSICOLOGIC |
Logic illustrated by physics. |
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LOGICIAN |
A person skilled in logic. |
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WITCRAFT |
The art of reasoning; logic. |
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LOGIC |
A treatise on logic; as, Mill's Logic. |
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SOPHISTRY |
The art or process of reasoning; logic. |
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METALOGICAL |
Beyond the scope or province of logic. |
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EXTRALOGICAL |
Lying outside of the domain of logic. |
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LOGICAL |
Of or pertaining to logic; used in logic; as, logical
subtilties. |
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OVERLOGICAL |
Excessively logical; adhering too closely to the forms
or rules of logic. |
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HEGELISM |
The system of logic and philosophy set forth by Hegel, a
German writer (1770-1831). |
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REFINEMENT |
That which is refined, elaborated, or polished to
excess; an affected subtilty; as, refinements of logic. |
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TRIVIUM |
The three " liberal" arts, grammar, logic, and rhetoric;
-- being a triple way, as it were, to eloquence. |
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PRECISIVE |
Cutting off; (Logic) exactly limiting by cutting off all
that is not absolutely relative to the purpose; as, precisive censure;
precisive abstraction. |
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LEMMA |
A preliminary or auxiliary proposition demonstrated or
accepted for immediate use in the demonstration of some other
proposition, as in mathematics or logic. |
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SCHOOL |
One of the seminaries for teaching logic, metaphysics, and
theology, which were formed in the Middle Ages, and which were
characterized by academical disputations and subtilties of reasoning. |
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ILLOGICAL |
Ignorant or negligent of the rules of logic or correct
reasoning; as, an illogical disputant; contrary of the rules of logic
or sound reasoning; as, an illogical inference. |
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CONVERTEND |
Any proposition which is subject to the process of
conversion; -- so called in its relation to itself as converted, after
which process it is termed the converse. See Converse, n. (Logic). |
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DIALECTICS |
That branch of logic which teaches the rules and modes
of reasoning; the application of logical principles to discursive
reasoning; the science... |