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Ma.

Rose Anne de Leon


BSA3
1. Meaning of concept

two concepts, one in which the mind expresses the subject, and the other in which it
expresses the attribute. Example: I must have a concept of horse, and one of whiteness, in
order to say 'The horse is white'.

the simplest object of which Logic takes account is the Concept. In its consideration of
words, therefore, it does not deal with any of those parts of speech, which taken by
themselves are incapable of giving us an independent concept. It is conversant not with
nine, but with two forms only of significant utterance, viz.: the Name, the verbal
expression of the Concept, and the Proposition, the verbal expression of the Judgment.
The proposition consists of three parts. These are, (1) the Subject -- that of which the
assertion is made: (2) the Predicate -- that which is affirmed or denied of the Subject:
and (3) the Copula -- the verb is or are which connects the Subject and the Predicate.
The Subject and the Predicate are called the Terms (from the Latin terminus -aboundary) of the proposition: and the predicate is said to be predicated of the subject.

The concept of a thing is an abstract idea in the mind which signifies (or stands for) the
thing itself.

2. Predicables

SYLLOGISM expressed product.


Premises: statements setting forth reason/evidence
Conclusion: statement that the evidence is claimed to support or imply.
A, B, C ideas A is B. proposition A is B. C is A. : C is B. syllogism

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