Summary Reviewer in Logic
Summary Reviewer in Logic
Simple – implies that the act cannot be resolved into another form.
Apprehension – implies an act of conceiving the object.
SIMPLE APPREHENSION – is a mental act of conceiving something without affirming or denying anything
about it..
PHANTASM – is a sensible image existing in the imagination, which is one of the internal faculties of the
brain.
ABSTRACTION –is a mental process whereby the mind separates the essential features of an object from
non-essential ones.
TYPES OF ABSTRACTION
1. FORMAL ABSTRACTION – withdraws a form or formal quality from a thing is either material or
immaterial.
2. TOTAL ABSTRACTION - withdraws a universal nature or essence from particular or individual.
CLASSIFICATION OF CONCEPTS:
1. FIRST CLASSIFICATION
A. FIRST INTENTION – is a concept by which we know a thing independent of our mind.
B. SECOND INTENTION – is a concept which presents the mode or manner how the mind
understands such nature or quality as a logical reality.
2. SECOND CLASSIFICATION
A. CONCRETE – concepts which signify a nature or quality as found residing in an individual or
subject.
B. ABSTRACT – concept which signifies a nature or quality as though it exists on its own right.
3. THIRD CLASSIFICATION
A. ABSOLUTE - concept that manifests itself to the mind as a substance and as independent
reality.
B. CONNOTATIVE – concept that manifest itself to the mind as an accident connected to a
substance.
4. FOURTH CLASSIFICATION
A. POSITIVE – concept that manifest an object to the mind according to what it is or what is
made of.
B. NEGATIVE - concept that manifest an object to the mind according to what it is not or what
is not made of.
TERM - sensible conventional sign of a concept.
CLASSIFICATION OF A TERM
A. UNIVOCAL - if they exhibit similarity in meaning or signification even if they are used in at least
two occasions.
B. EQUIVOCAL - terms maybe considered equivocal if they exhibit difference in meaning or
signification whenever they are used in at least two occasions.
The term “DEFINITION” derived from the LATIN word “DEFINIRE” which translated to mean “TO ASSIGN
LIMITS” or “TO ENCLOSE WITHIN LIMITS”.
TYPES OF DEFINITION
1. NOMINAL DEFINITION – merely points out what the term stand for, without explaining what it is
itself.
CLASSIFICATIONS OF NOMINAL DEFINITION
1. DEFINITION BY ETYMOLOGY – attained by tracing the origin of the word.
2. DEFINITION BY DESCRIPTION – attained by describing the term to be defined
3. DEFINITION BY SYNONYM – attained by giving a word equivalent to the same term to be
defined.
4. DEFINITION BY DEFINITION BY EXAMPLE – done by citing anything that will represent the
term to be defined
2. REAL DEFINITION – not only declares what a thing is signified but explains what is its nature.
CLASSIFICATIONS OF REAL DEFINITION
1. PROXIMATE GENUS –refers here to the group or kind for which a term is included
2. SPECIFIC DIFFERENCE – refers to the feature that distinguishes one thing from another.
RULES OF DEFINITION-
1. A DEFINITION MUST BE CLEAR - The purpose of a definition is to explain a thing or a
Concept
2. A DEFINITION MUST BE BRIEF BUT PRECISE - It should include only those features which explain
a thing as it is
3. A DEFINITION MUST BE POSITIVE - A definition should tell us what it is and not what is
it not
4. A DEFINITION MUST BE ADEQUATE - The definition states exactly the nature of the thing
defined so that, in effect, they are convertible or co-extensive
5. A DEFINITION MUST NOT CONTAIN THE TERM THAT IS TO BE DEFINED - We cannot define a term
by itself
INFERENCE – the process whereby the mind draws new idea from one proposition to another is a fitting
of the term inference
IMMEDIATE INFERENCE – is a synonymous with the word “direct” or “without any do”.
MEDIATE INFERENCE- the word “MEDIATE” entails the use of two propositions
TYPES OF MEDIATE INFERENCE
1. INDUCTIVE
2. DEDUCTIVE
ANTECEDENT – regarded as the structure of logical inference to which something is to be taken or
inferred from.
LATIN word “ANTECEDO” which means “SOMETHING THAT GOES BEFORE”.
CONSEQUENT- regarded as the structure of logical inference to which something is to be taken or
inferred from the antecedent
LATIN word “CONSEQUOR” means “SOMETHING THAT FOLLOWS AFTER”
6 PRINCIPLES OF INFERENCE
1. Principle of identity and the principle of contradiction
2. Principle of identifying the third and the principle of separating the third
3. Principle of DICTUM OMNI and the principle of DICTUM DENULO
PRINCIPLE OF IDENTITY – which claims that if any argument is true then it is really true.
PRINCIPLE OF CONTRADICTION – states that a thing cannot be and not be at the same time or
in the same respect.
PRINCIPLE OF IDENTIFYING THE THIRD – principle whose basic premise is “two things that are
identical with the same third thing are identical with each other”.
PRINCIPLE OF SEPARATING THE THIRD – “two things of which the one is identical with the same
third thing and the other is not are not really identical with one another.
PRINCIPLE OF DICTUM DE OMNI (LAW OF ALL) – applicable to any affirmative syllogism and
formulated as “what is predicated of a logical whole maybe predicated distributively in each of
its inferior.
PRINCIPLE OF DICTUM DENULO (LAW OF NONE) – basic premise is “what is denied of a logical
whole may also be denied ditributively of each inferior
FOUR KINDS OF LOGICAL OPPOSUTION
1. CONTRADICTORY – kind of logical opposition which exists between two propositions which
are different in both quantity and quality
2. CONTRARY- logical opposition which exists between two propositions which differ in quality
RULES ABIDING THE CONTRARY OPPOSITION
1. If one is true the other is false
2. If one is false then the other is doubtful
3. SUB – CONTRARY – logical opposition exists between two propositions which are entirely
different in terms of quality
RULES ABIDING THE SUB- CONTRARY OPPOSITION
1. If one is false then the other is true
2. Of one is true the other is doubtful
4. SUB – ALTERNATE- kind of logical opposition which exist between two propositions which
are different in terms of quantity
RULES ABIDING THE SUB- ALTERNATE OPPOSITION
1. If the UNIVERSAL is true then the PARTICULAR is also true
2. If the UNIVERSAL is false then the PARTICULAR is doubtful
3. If the PARTICULAR is true then the UNIVERSAL is doubtful
4. If the PARTICULAR is false then the UNIVERSAL is also false
3 MAJOR TERM
1. MAJOR PREMISE – consists of a predicate term of the conclusion and a middle term and
naturally begins with a universal quantifier.
2. MINOR PREMISE – consist of a subject term of the conclusion and a middle term
3. CONCLUSION – consist both subject term which is found in the minor premise and the
predicate term which is found in the major premise
RULES OF SYLLOGISM
RULES ON TERMS
1. THERE MUST BE THREE AND ONLY THREE TERMS
2. NO TERM MUST HAVE GREATER EXTENSION IN THE CONCLUSION THAN IT HAS IN
THE PREMISES
3. THE MIDDLE TERM MUST NOT APPEAR IN THE CONCLUSION
4. THE MIDDLE TERM MUST BE UNIVERSAL AT LEAST ONCE
RULES ON PROPOSITIONS
5. TWO AFFIRMATIVE PREMISES YIELD AN AFFIRMATIVE CONCLUSION
6. TWO NEGATIVE PREMISES YIELD NO CONCLUSION
7. WHEN ON PREMISE IS NEGATIVE, THE CONCLUION MUST BE NEGATIVE, WHEN ON
PREMISE IS PARTICULAR, THE CONCLUSION MUST BE PARTICULAR
8. WHEN BOTH PREMISES ARE PARTICULAR, THERE IS NO CONCLUSION
MOODS
- refer to the order of the propositions according to their quality and quantity
3. SORITES – consisting of a series of syllogism of which the conclusions except for the last
are omitted.