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TRUE / FALSE 1) No cogent arguments have false conclusions

Philosophy

TRUE / FALSE

1) No cogent arguments have false conclusions.

2) An argument is a set of statements intended to provide information about a situation, topic, or event.

3. A conditional statement is the same thing as a hypothetical statement.

4. Any argument that is a substitution instance of affirming the consequent is a valid argument.

5. All sound arguments are valid.

6. In "If Suzie goes to the party, then John will go," the antecedent is "Suzie goes to the party."

7. The statement "If Archarcharch wins the Belmont Stakes, then Archarcharch will be a Triple Crown winner" is a disjunction.

8. The statements comprising an "either-or" sentence are called disjuncts.

9. Commands are not statements.

10. A true conclusion may be validly deduced from false premises.

11. All weak arguments are uncogent.

12. An invalid argument can have false premises and a true conclusion.

13. All weak arguments have false conclusions.

14. A counterexample proves that an argument form is invalid.

15. All uncogent arguments are weak.

16. A category statement asserts some relation between sets or collections of things.

17. Words like "because" and "since" are always followed by a premise.

18. A term is a word or phrase that stands for a class of things.

19. Every argument with a valid form is valid.

20. A subconclusion is a statement that serves both as a conclusion and as a premise.

21. An argument diagram should include all statements from the passage.

22. Any argument that is a substitution instance of affirming the consequent is a valid argument.

23. If an argument form is invalid, then so is every substitution instance of that argument form.

24. The Principle of Fairness requires that we be loyal to the original argument and not distort its meaning when rewriting it as a well-crafted argument.

25. Sound arguments can have false conclusions.

26. Rhetorical questions are statements.

27. All cogent arguments are strong.

28. A substitution instance of an argument form may be valid even if the argument form itself is invalid.

29. All sound arguments have true conclusions.

30. No valid arguments have false premises.

31. All sentences are statements.

32. All valid arguments are sound.

33. An argument that results from uniformly replacing letters in an argument form with terms or statements is a substitution instance of that form.

34. Some arguments intend demonstrating their conclusions to be probably true.

35. An argument's conclusion is affirmed on the basis of its premises.

36. All strong arguments have true conclusions.

38. All arguments have more than one premise.

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