An inductive argument whose premises, if true, would make the conclusion probable is said to be strong.
Answer the following statement true (T) or false (F)
True
You might also like to view...
For Kierkegaard, what blinds us to existence?
A) Knowledge B) Faith C) Subjectivity D) Detachment
Why does legal reasoning use deductive reasoning?
A. Its conclusions are very important. B. Its conclusions have to do with public matters. C. Its premises must be relevant to the conclusion. D. It must give only one right answer.
What is narrative time?
A. the time it takes to tell a story B. the time period in which a historical or contemporary novel is set C. the age of oral storytelling before writing was invented D. the compressed time experience of a novel or a film
The hard problem of consciousness is the problem of determining
A. Why brain states produce mental states. B. Which brain states cause which mental states. C. Which brain states produce what type of behavior. D. Why brain states produce behavior.