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Chapter 1,2,3,4 Review

If a clue has 2 words, there is no space between the words.
Across
An appeal to ____: When you are pressured to accept an idea because it is popular.
Someone who is more knowledgeable in a particular subject/field than most others are.
When inductively strong arguments have true premises, they are said to be ____.
A type of argument that is intended to provide logically conclusive support for its conclusion.
An if-then premise is also referred to as a _____ premise.
<2 WORDS> The view that the truth is relative to societies.
<2 WORDS> A huge collection of very well supported beliefs that we all rely on to inform our actions and choices.
<2 WORDS> A type of argument also referred to as: denying the consequent.
<2 WORDS> A type of argument also referred to as: affirming the consequent.
An ____ premise offers support to a conclusion without the help of any other premises.
____’s fallacy: thinking that previous events can affect the probabilities in the random event at hand.
Down
<2 WORDS> When you are pressured to conform by your peers.
A type of argument that is intended to provide probable support for its conclusion.
<2 WORDS> Bogus news stories that masquerade as truthful reporting.
____ words: a type of statement that waters down a claim in a subtle way - just enough to ensure that it is technically true but superficially misleading.
Reasons given in support of another statement.
Philosophical ____ : The view that we know much less than we think we do, or nothing at all.
The statement that premises are intended to support.
<2 WORDS> The systematic evaluation or formulation of beliefs, or statements, by rational standards.
The study of good reasoning.
<2 WORDS> Signal that a premise or conclusion is present.
A deductive argument made up of three statements - two premises and a conclusion.
The assertion of reasons in support of a statement.
Why or how something is the case.
An assertion that something is or is not the case.
A philosophy of life.