paralogism

  • 31leg- — To collect; with derivatives meaning “to speak.” Oldest form *leg̑ , becoming *leg in centum languages. Derivatives include leech1, lecture, legend, intelligent, sacrilege, loyal, and logic. 1. Perhaps Germanic *lēkjaz, enchanter, one who speaks… …

    Universalium

  • 32Tertullian — • Ecclesiastical writer in the second and third centuries Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Tertullian     Tertullian     † …

    Catholic encyclopedia

  • 33non sequitur — I noun anacoluthon, bad logic, circular reasoning, contradiction of terms, disconnectedness, discontinuity, fallacious argument, fallacious reasoning, fallacy, false reasoning, flaw in the argument, illogical conclusion, illogical deduction,… …

    Law dictionary

  • 34paralogy — noun a) paralogism b) A paralogous relationship …

    Wiktionary

  • 35paralogical — adjective a) Of or pertaining to paralogism b) illogical …

    Wiktionary

  • 36Hard Grit — ist ein 53 minütiger Dokumentarfilm aus der Produktion von Slackjaw Film aus dem Jahr 1998. Er zeigt mehrere bekannte Sportkletterer auf Kletterrouten von hohem Schwierigkeitsgrad im Gritstone im Norden Englands (Peak District und Yorkshire). Der …

    Deutsch Wikipedia

  • 37dialectic — (Gk., dialektikē, the art of conversation or debate) Most fundamentally, the process of reasoning to obtain truth and knowledge on any topic. According to the different views of this process, different conceptions of dialectic emerge. Thus in the …

    Philosophy dictionary

  • 38soul — The immaterial ‘I’ that possesses conscious experience, controls passion, desire, and action, and maintains a perfect identity from birth (or before) to death (or after). Modern philosophy of mind has frequently been concerned with dismantling… …

    Philosophy dictionary

  • 39fallacy — I noun captio, deception, deceptive belief, delusion, deviation from truth, distortion, erroneous reasoning, erroneousness, error, fallacious argument, false appearance, falseness, falsity, faultiness, faulty reasoning, flaw in reasoning,… …

    Law dictionary

  • 40Science and British philosophy: Boyle and Newton — G.A.J.Rogers INTRODUCTION Achievements in the natural sciences in the period from Nicholas Copernicus (1473– 1543) to the death of Isaac Newton (1642–1727) changed our whole understanding of the nature of the universe and of the ways in which we… …

    History of philosophy