Definition, Betydelse & Anagram | Engelska ordet PROPOSITIONS


PROPOSITIONS

Definition av PROPOSITIONS

  1. böjningsform av proposition

1

Antal bokstäver

12

Är palindrom

Nej

30
IO
ION
IT
NS
ON
ONS
OP

1

3

4

II
IIR
IIS
IIT


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Exempel på hur man kan använda PROPOSITIONS i en mening

  • The Bayesian interpretation of probability can be seen as an extension of propositional logic that enables reasoning with hypotheses; that is, with propositions whose truth or falsity is unknown.
  • Cognitivism (ethics), the philosophical view that ethical sentences express propositions and are capable of being true or false.
  • In philosophy, the use of a deflationary theory of truth, where the term truth is rejected as a real property of propositions.
  • Ethical non-naturalism stands in opposition to ethical naturalism, which claims that moral terms and properties are reducible to non-moral terms and properties, as well as to all forms of moral anti-realism, including ethical subjectivism (which denies that moral propositions refer to objective facts), error theory (which denies that any moral propositions are true), and non-cognitivism (which denies that moral sentences express propositions at all).
  • Euclid's approach consists in assuming a small set of intuitively appealing axioms (postulates) and deducing many other propositions (theorems) from these.
  • In logic, the law of non-contradiction (LNC) (also known as the law of contradiction, principle of non-contradiction (PNC), or the principle of contradiction) states that contradictory propositions cannot both be true in the same sense at the same time, e.
  • Logical conjunction is an operation on two logical values, typically the values of two propositions, that produces a value of true if and only if (also known as iff) both of its operands are true.
  • Compound propositions are formed by connecting propositions by logical connectives representing the truth functions of conjunction, disjunction, implication, biconditional, and negation.
  • In everyday language, it is typically ascribed to things that aim to represent reality or otherwise correspond to it, such as beliefs, propositions, and declarative sentences.
  • In its earliest form (defined by Aristotle in his 350 BC book Prior Analytics), a deductive syllogism arises when two true premises (propositions or statements) validly imply a conclusion, or the main point that the argument aims to get across.
  • However, arguably the most prominent analyses are written on concepts or propositions and are known as conceptual analysis (Foley 1996).
  • The investigative premise of intellectual history is that ideas do not develop in isolation from the thinkers who conceptualize and apply those ideas; thus the intellectual historian studies ideas in two contexts: (i) as abstract propositions for critical application; and (ii) in concrete terms of culture, life, and history.
  • Most semantics of classical logic are bivalent, meaning all of the possible denotations of propositions can be categorized as either true or false.
  • Systematically, it resembles other works of medieval logic, organised under the basic headings of the Aristotelian Predicables, Categories, terms, propositions, and syllogisms.
  • Legal writers use citation signals to tell readers how the citations support (or do not support) their propositions, organizing citations in a hierarchy of importance so the reader can quickly determine the relative weight of a citation.
  • Similarly, propositions can also be characterized as the objects of belief and other propositional attitudes.
  • The Political Compass is a website soliciting responses to a set of 62 propositions in order to rate political ideology in a spectrum with two axes: one about economic policy (left–right) and another about social policy (authoritarian–libertarian).
  • Moral realism (also ethical realism) is the position that ethical sentences express propositions that refer to objective features of the world (that is, features independent of subjective opinion), some of which may be true to the extent that they report those features accurately.
  • Provided that one understands and believes a self-evident proposition, self-evident propositions are not in need of proof.
  • For example, substituting propositions in natural language for logical variables, the inverse of the following conditional proposition.


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