11. A second-order enthymeme is one in which the major premise is left unstated
ID: 3497374 • Letter: 1
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11. A second-order enthymeme is one in which the major premise is left unstated Answer: 12. In a disjunctive syllogism, one premise is a disjunction and the other premise denies the truth of one of the disjuncts. Answer: 13. "They told me that if I ran the mile in under four minutes, I'd be on the team. Well, I did! So I am!" This argument contains a pure hypothetical syllogism. Answer 14. "If someone turns on the sprinklers, my paint job will get wet. No one turned them on, so I know my paint job is dry This argument is an example of modus tollens. Answer: 15. The point of posing a counterdilemma is not usually to invalidate an opponent's dilemma. Answer: argument if it can be 16. An argument is a(n) translated into a standard-form categorical syllogism. -syllogisticvalid invalid -order enthymeme, the minor premise is 17. In a unstated. -third -second first 18. When you deny the consequent, you use the logical technique called modus tollens-ponens -operandi syllogisms contain "if...then" propositions. 19 -Hypothetical -Categorical-Disjunctive 20. To "grasp a dilemma by the horns," you must show that one of the -disjuncts --conjuncts ambiguities it contains is false.Explanation / Answer
11. False. Second Order enthymeme is one in which the minor premise unstated.
12. True. In a disjunctive syllogism, one premise is a disjunction and the other denies the truth of one of the disjuncts.
13. True. This is an example of a hypothetical syllogism.
14. True. This is an example of modus tollens.
Please post the other questions separately as we are supposed to answer just one question or four sub parts of a question.
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