The fallacy of affirming the consequent has the following form:
A. If A, then B; Not A; So, not B.
B. If A, then B; Not B; So, not A.
C. If A, then B; A; So, B.
D. If A, then B; B; So, A.
D. If A, then B; B; So, A.
Philosophy & Belief
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Guru Nanak embraced the authority of the written word
Indicate whether the statement is true or false.
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Which of the following is not one of the anticipated benefits of self-driving cars
What will be an ideal response?
Philosophy & Belief
In his initial examination of his beliefs, the one thing that Descartes could not doubt was that
A. he was doubting. B. he had a body. C. 2 + 3 = 5. D. he was awake and not dreaming.
Philosophy & Belief
A valid argument with true premises is
A. sound. B. strong. C. hypothetical. D. cogent.
Philosophy & Belief