0 (in philosophy) a process of logic in which two general statements lead to a more particular statement --
For separate accounts of "is wrong" would mean that the syllogism commits a fallacy of equivocation.
There follow handwritten notes, diagrams, and rules on the transcendentals, praedicamenta, predicables, and syllogisms written in several hands.
A syllogism cannot be explained by anything, except another syllogism.
This is, however, not intended to imply a syllogism which suggested that correspondingly research was always design though occasionally it may be so.
These external models took the form of shapes representing the various terms in the syllogisms, which the participants could use help them reason.
Separate conditional syllogisms at different levels of abstraction are being used to justify the rejection of chance in significance tests and to corroborate theories.
The claims of the occult are now demonstrative, since they are founded upon syllogisms whose middle terms have been intuited.
Any reasoning that went beyond the syllogism was grounded in a subject.