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premise is the proposition of an argument from which a conclusion is drawn; reason intended to support a conclusion. (Intro)
Ãâó: www2.sjsu.edu/logic/glossary.htm
premise A proposition that is offered in support of the truth of another proposition (the conclusion) in an argument.
Ãâó: info1.nwmissouri.edu/~rfield/gloss.HTML
premise it is the rule (often time unstated) that governs a thesis and its rationale. A premise, thesis, and rationale make up a syllogism. Here is an example: premise - all birds have feathers; rationale: (because) the sparrow has feathers; thesis (therefore) the sparrow is a bird.
Ãâó: www.religion.emory.edu/faculty/robbins/SRI/defns/p...
premise A statement offered as a reason for another statement.
Ãâó: www.jeffyoshimi.net/teaching/Logic/DefinitionsRevi...
premise Statements that set forth the evidence or reasons.
Ãâó: csunx2.bsc.edu/bmyers/Section1.1.htm
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