Start here. Do you see the problems?Classic example: If A is part of B and then B is part of C... C is necessarily part of A. — javi2541997
If A is part of B and then B is part of C... C is necessarily part of A. — javi2541997
(...)there is nothing logically self-contradictory about an immortal man. We believe the proposition on the basis of induction, because there is no well-authenticated case of a man living more than (say) 150 years; but this only makes the proposition probable, not certain. It cannot be certain so long as living men exist. — Bertrand Russell
but this only makes the proposition probable, not certain. It cannot be certain so long as living men exist.
... which is obviously fallacious.
You then changed it too: C has parts of A, which is not the same as: C is necessarily a part of A.
There are a ton of good books on the subject, even cheap used. Try your library or ask an instructor for a recommendation. And if the book bores you to tears or is incomprehensible, get another book! This isn't rocket science and can be enjoyable as well as useful
No. All A is C, some C is A.Then, necessarily C has to be part of A when B is already part of A — javi2541997
But this is why you need a decent textbook. — tim wood
I want to ask the illustrious members of this forum about other perfect syllogism — javi2541997
I want to ask the illustrious members of this forum about other perfect syllogism — javi2541997
If you mean other valid forms, here:about other perfect syllogism — javi2541997
Some Swedes are not Protestants.
All parishioners are Protestants.
Therefore some Swedes are not Parishioners. — god must be atheist
To be honest, there is no such thing as a perfect syllogism. It is like asking what the perfect two numbers are that you can add together to form a sum. — god must be atheist
If you mean other valid forms, here:
https://www.friesian.com/aris — tim wood
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