Logic
11logic — ► NOUN 1) reasoning conducted or assessed according to strict principles of validity. 2) the ability to reason correctly. 3) (the logic of) the course of action following as a necessary consequence of. 4) a system or set of principles underlying… …
12logic — index common sense, data, dialectic, ratiocination, reason (sound judgment) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …
13Logic — es una herramienta multiuso desarrollada bajo licencia pública de Mozilla. En un principio su función fue únicamente evitar el secuestro del navegador Internet Explorer, pero en sucesivas versiones se fueron incorporando diversas herramientas con …
14Logic — [engl.], Logik …
15logic — (n.) mid 14c., branch of philosophy that treats of forms of thinking, from O.Fr. logique (13c.), from L. (ars) logica, from Gk. logike (techne) reasoning (art), from fem. of logikos pertaining to speaking or reasoning, from logos reason, idea,… …
16logic — [n] science of reasoning antithesis and synthesis, argumentation, coherence, connection, course of thought, deduction, dialectic, good sense, induction, inference, linkage, philosophy, ratiocination, rationale, relationship, sanity, sense, sound… …
17Logic — For other uses, see Logic (disambiguation). Philosophy …
18logic — logicless, adj. /loj ik/, n. 1. the science that investigates the principles governing correct or reliable inference. 2. a particular method of reasoning or argumentation: We were unable to follow his logic. 3. the system or principles of… …
19logic — noun 1 system of reasoning ADJECTIVE ▪ formal ▪ mathematical ▪ deductive, inductive ▪ Aristotelian, classical ▪ …
20logic — The general science of inference. Deductive logic, in which a conclusion follows from a set of premises, is distinguished from inductive logic, which studies the way in which premises may support a conclusion without entailing it. In deductive… …