An evaluation term for an argument whose conclusion cannot be false if the premises are true.A valid argument’s evaluation derives from its form, rather than its content. Hence, a valid argument can have a combination of truth values, except for true premises and a false conclusion. (See also Logical consequence.)
Trending Post
Books
- 
	
	
		
		Discipline Is Destiny: The Power of Self-Control (The Stoic Virtues Series)
	
				
	$15.99
	 - 
	
	
		
		Stillness Is the Key
	
				
	$7.99
	 - 
	
	
		
		Right Thing, Right Now: Justice in an Unjust World (The Stoic Virtues Series)
	
				
	$28.00
	 - 
	
	
		
		How to Think Like a Roman Emperor: The Stoic Philosophy of Marcus Aurelius
	
				
	$13.12
	 - 
	
	
		
		Letters from a Stoic: Penguin Classics
	
				
	$14.52
	 
biographies
-  
Zeno of Elea December 3, 2023 -  
Zeno of Citium December 3, 2023 -  
Xenophanes December 3, 2023 -  
Wittgenstein, Ludwig December 3, 2023 -  
Voltaire (François-Marie Arouet) December 3, 2023 -  
Venn, John December 3, 2023 -  
Turing, Alan Mathison December 3, 2023 -  
Thoreau, Henry David December 3, 2023 -  
Thales of Miletus December 3, 2023 -  
Spinoza, Baruch December 3, 2023 -  
Socrates December 3, 2023 -  
Smith, Adam December 3, 2023 -  
Seneca December 3, 2023 -  
Schopenhauer, Arthur December 3, 2023 -  
Schleiermacher, Friedrich December 3, 2023 
				
					












