menu-iconExamlexExamLexServices

Discover

Ask a Question
  1. All Topics
  2. Topic
    Philosophy
  3. Study Set
    Philosophy Here and Now Powerful Ideas in Everyday Life
  4. Exam
    Exam 1: Philosophy and You
  5. Question
    An Argument of This Form- If P, Then Q; Not
Solved

An Argument of This Form- If P, Then Q; Not

Question 32

Question 32

True/False

An argument of this form- If p, then q; not p; therefore, not q -is called modus ponens.

Correct Answer:

verifed

Verified

Unlock this answer now
Get Access to more Verified Answers free of charge

Related Questions

Q27: A question-and-answer dialogue in which propositions are

Q28: What is the fallacy of straw man?

Q29: The fallacy of rejecting a statement on

Q30: What is the fallacy of appeal to

Q31: The fallacy of _ is arguing erroneously

Q33: For Socrates, an unexamined life is a

Q34: If inductive arguments succeed in lending probable

Q35: Persuasion does not necessarily involve giving any

Q36: Any type of declarative statement is an

Q37: For Socrates, the good of the soul

Examlex

ExamLex

About UsContact UsPerks CenterHomeschoolingTest Prep

Work With Us

Campus RepresentativeInfluencers

Links

FaqPricingChrome Extension

Download The App

Get App StoreGet Google Play

Policies

Privacy PolicyTerms of ServiceHonor CodeCommunity Guidelines

Scan To Download

qr-code

Copyright © (2025) ExamLex LLC.

Privacy PolicyTerms Of ServiceHonor CodeCommunity Guidelines