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MABUTOL, Madelein Diane C.

BSA – 1A Exercise in Logic

1. Why do we say that term is expressive of a concept of idea?


When it draws the reader in and brings the story life with sensory elements. Academic
writing is truth-filled, whereas expressive writing is infused with a feeling of meaning and
purpose. First-person perspective is also used in expressive writing.

2. What is Judgement?
Instead of making fast decisions, it requires critical thinking, honestly assessing the
evidence, reasoning through the situation, and thoroughly examining the information.
Furthermore, sound judgment necessitates the ability to modify one's perspective in reaction to
new facts as well as different arguments and points of view. At this time, it should be clear that
judgment is a fundamental "strength of the head" - a highly analytical personality trait.

3. Discuss the process of Judgement?


A judgment is the final decision of a court or tribunal. The final decision will be made
after the judges have considered all relevant evidence from the legal trial, as well as all rights and
obligations.

In mathematical logic, a judgment (or judgment) or assertion is a proclamation or enunciation in a


metalanguage. For example, typical first-order logic conclusions would be that a claim is true or
that a string is a properly formed formula. A judgment could make a similar claim about the
presence of a free variable in an object language statement or the verifiability of a proposition. A
judgment, in general, can be any claim that the metatheory can define inductively.

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