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Logic
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Etymological : philosophy comes from two Greek words.
Real : philosophy is a search for meaning.
Ethics : which delves into the morality of human acts.
Epistemology : the theory of knowledge, the goal of which is truth.
Ontology : the philosophy of being.
Cosmology : study of inanimate beings such as the universe.
Aesthetics : study of the beautiful
Philosophical psychology : study of the life principle of living things specifically that of man.
Theodicy : philosophical study of god.
Social philosophy : study of relationship between man and the family, Church , and the State.
Philosophy of Man : inquiry into man as person and as existent being in the world.
Logic : derived from the word ‘logos’ which means study.
Art : means the making of a work of beauty.
Techne : its students how to make a good argument.
Material logic : concerned with the aspect of subject matter or content or truth.
Deductive logic : kind in which the premises flow logically into the conclusion.
Inductive logic : conclusion, but with less certainty than deductive logic.
Information : the most common function, attested to by textbooks and all other books history, lit.
Expressive : is best illustrated in poetry where emotion and attitudes are expressed beautifully
Bone house : poet Gerard Manley Hopkins calls our body a __?
Casement : poet John Keats calls a window a __?
First intention : a concept by which we understand what a thing is a according to what it is in reality.
Second Intention : a concept by which we understand not only what a thing is in reality but also how it is in the mind.
Concrete Concept : a concept which expresses a “form” and a “subject”.
Abstract Concept : a concept which has “form ” only.
Absolute concept : signifies the meaning of a complete substance endowed with its independent reality.
Connotative Concept : the object as an accident existing in a substance.
Logic
Across:| 2. | poet Gerard Manley Hopkins calls our body a __? | | 9. | which delves into the morality of human acts. | | 11. | conclusion, but with less certainty than deductive logic. | | 12. | the most common function, attested to by textbooks and all other books history, lit. |
| | 15. | philosophical study of god. | | 17. | study of inanimate beings such as the universe. | | 19. | poet John Keats calls a window a __? | | 22. | the philosophy of being. |
| | Down:| 1. | a concept which expresses a “form” and a “subject”. | | 3. | is best illustrated in poetry where emotion and attitudes are expressed beautifully | | 4. | study of the beautiful | | 5. | study of relationship between man and the family, Church , and the State. | | 6. | study of the life principle of living things specifically that of man. | | 7. | a concept which has “form ” only. | | 8. | its students how to make a good argument. | | 9. | philosophy comes from two Greek words. |
| | 10. | philosophy is a search for meaning. | | 13. | means the making of a work of beauty. | | 14. | the object as an accident existing in a substance. | | 16. | kind in which the premises flow logically into the conclusion. | | 18. | concerned with the aspect of subject matter or content or truth. | | 20. | the theory of knowledge, the goal of which is truth. | | 21. | derived from the word ‘logos’ which means study. |
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© 2014
PuzzleFast.com, Noncommercial Use Only
Logic
Across:| 2. | poet Gerard Manley Hopkins calls our body a __? | | 9. | which delves into the morality of human acts. | | 11. | conclusion, but with less certainty than deductive logic. | | 12. | the most common function, attested to by textbooks and all other books history, lit. |
| | 15. | philosophical study of god. | | 17. | study of inanimate beings such as the universe. | | 19. | poet John Keats calls a window a __? | | 22. | the philosophy of being. |
| | Down:| 1. | a concept which expresses a “form” and a “subject”. | | 3. | is best illustrated in poetry where emotion and attitudes are expressed beautifully | | 4. | study of the beautiful | | 5. | study of relationship between man and the family, Church , and the State. | | 6. | study of the life principle of living things specifically that of man. | | 7. | a concept which has “form ” only. | | 8. | its students how to make a good argument. | | 9. | philosophy comes from two Greek words. |
| | 10. | philosophy is a search for meaning. | | 13. | means the making of a work of beauty. | | 14. | the object as an accident existing in a substance. | | 16. | kind in which the premises flow logically into the conclusion. | | 18. | concerned with the aspect of subject matter or content or truth. | | 20. | the theory of knowledge, the goal of which is truth. | | 21. | derived from the word ‘logos’ which means study. |
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© 2014
PuzzleFast.com, Noncommercial Use Only