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Philosophy
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Is rigorous, logical analysis of our fundamental concepts, categories, and principles
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Metaphysics
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Branch of philosophy that answers questions such as what exists? what is nature/structure of reality? What am I? Why does anything happen? Why is there anything rather than nothing? Do I ever act freely?
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Epistemology
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Branch of philosophy that answers questions such as what is knowledge? what do I know? when am I justified in taking myself to know something? Is perception a source of knowledge? Is reason a source of knowlege?
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Ethics
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Branch of philosophy that answers questions such as what is right/wrong? What is "right"/"wrong"? What is good/bad? What is "good"/"bad"?
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Valid
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The reasoning is correct
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Sound
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1. The argument is valid
2. The premises are true
Invalid arguments can never be sound
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Modus Ponens = Valid
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If P then Q, P, therefore Q is valid
If P then Q, Q, therefore P is invalid
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Test of Validity
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If the premises were true, would the conclusion be necessarily true? I.E. is it possible for premises to be true, and yet the conclusion be false?
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Valid Argument
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A valid argument can have false premises, don't need to know the truth value of premises to determine validity
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Modus Tollens = Always Valid
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If p, then q, not q, therefore not p
Denying antecedent
If p, then q, not p, therefore not q invalid
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Thomas Aquinas = says God is omnipotent which means all powerful and has infinite goodness, argues for omnipotence
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Argument from Motion, Argument from efficient causation, argument from contingency
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Argument from Motion
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P1: "Some things are in motion."
P2: "Whatever is moved is moved by another"
P3: The relation of mover to moved " cannot go on to infinity."
C: A 1st mover is necessary
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Argument from Efficient Causation
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P1: There are efficient causes
P2: Nothing can be the efficient cause of itself
P3: The order of efficient causes cannot stretch back to infinity
C: There is a first efficient cause
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Occam's Razor (the parsimony principle)
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If 2 theories explain some phenomenon equally well, the simpler theory of the two is more likely to be correct. (more can go wrong with more complex theory)
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Essential Causal Succession
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The arm moves the hand. The hand moves the stick. The stick moves the rock.
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