This blog will help us study and develop skills required to "reason" and "argue".
Arguments are abstract patterns of reasoning.
In the due course, we will learn
1) How to analyze arguments
2) How to evaluate Deductive Arguments
>> Propositional Logic
>> Categorical Logic
3) How to evaluate Inductive Arguments
>> Statistical generalization
>> Applying generalization down to a particular case
>> Arguments from analogies
>> Causal reasoning and probability
>> Decision Making
4) How to avoid fallacies
>> Avoiding common mistakes in an argument like, vagueness, ambiguity, irrelevance, etc...
The above will be achieved by:
1) Analyzing practical issues
2) Fascinating theoretical questions
3) No arbitrary and unjustified belief
Arguments are abstract patterns of reasoning.
In the due course, we will learn
1) How to analyze arguments
2) How to evaluate Deductive Arguments
>> Propositional Logic
>> Categorical Logic
3) How to evaluate Inductive Arguments
>> Statistical generalization
>> Applying generalization down to a particular case
>> Arguments from analogies
>> Causal reasoning and probability
>> Decision Making
4) How to avoid fallacies
>> Avoiding common mistakes in an argument like, vagueness, ambiguity, irrelevance, etc...
The above will be achieved by:
1) Analyzing practical issues
2) Fascinating theoretical questions
3) No arbitrary and unjustified belief


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