PSYCHOLOGY OF EMOTIONS

THE PSYCHOLOGY OF EMOTIONS

EMOTION AND LOGIC

Question [CLICK ON ANY CHOICE TO KNOW THE RIGHT ANSWER]
Syllogism
A
Logical appeal
B
Deductive reasoning
C
Inductive reasoning
D
Reductive appeal
Explanation: 

Detailed explanation-1: -A syllogism is a form of deductive argument where the conclusion follows from the truth of two (or more) premises. A deductive argument moves from the general to the specific and opposes inductive arguments that move from the specific to the general: 1. All mammals are animals. Camels are mammals.

Detailed explanation-2: -An example of a syllogism is “All mammals are animals. All elephants are mammals. Therefore, all elephants are animals.” In a syllogism, the more general premise is called the major premise ("All mammals are animals"). The more specific premise is called the minor premise ("All elephants are mammals").

Detailed explanation-3: -Syllogisms (a type of Deductive reasoning) Syllogisms consist of three parts: general statement ("universal") particular example.

There is 1 question to complete.