- A
premise or
premiss is a proposition—a true or
false declarative statement—used in an
argument to
prove the
truth of
another proposition called the conclusion...
- premises, in
which a
syllogism is
invalid because both
premises are
negative The
Fallacy Files:
Affirmative Conclusion from a
Negative Premiss v t e...
- The
fallacy of
exclusive premises is a
syllogistic fallacy committed in a
categorical syllogism that is
invalid because both of its
premises are negative...
- from the
original (PDF) on June 19, 2010. Gary N. Curtis. "Negative
Conclusion from
Affirmative Premisses".
Fallacy Files.
Retrieved December 20, 2010....
- "practical" philosophy, such as that of
Gadamer and McDowell, is
often premissed upon a
rejection of Aristotelianism's
traditional metaphysical or theoretical...
- permissible, permission, permissive, permissory, permit, permittee, premise,
premiss, premit, pretermission, pretermit, promise, promisee, promissive, promissory...
- demarcation, then
singular statements must be
available which can
serve as
premisses in
falsifying inferences. Our
criterion therefore appears only to shift...
- a
natural right of self-ownership over his
person with the
egalitarian premiss that
natural resources should be
shared equally. Right-wing libertarians...
- incon****uous
premisses" – when, instead,
philosophy should, "like the
successful sciences",
proceed only from tangible,
scrutinizable premisses and trust...
- that the
argument can be deceptive. A
statement cannot prove itself. A
premiss [sic] must have a
different source of reason,
ground or
evidence for its...