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Introduction to Logic

by Jason Lisle Author

In the Christian worldview, we can answer these questions because we know that God determines the correct way to reason. He is the standard for all truth claims. In this book you will learn about logic and the Christian worldview, the Biblical basis for the laws of logic, if faith is contrary to reason, informal logical fallacies, and more. Dr. Jason Lisle is a Christian astrophysicist who writes and speaks on various topics relating to science and the defense of the Christian faith.

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Additional Details

Resource Type
Book
ISBN
9781683441489
Print Status
In Print
Chapters
38
Pages
192
Suggested Grades
7th - 12th
Publisher
Master Books
Copyright
Dec 10, 2018

Chapters

  • 1 Logic and the Christian Worldview
  • 2 All Knowledge is Ultimately from God
  • 3 Why Study Logic?
  • 4 Propositions and Arguments
  • 5 Inductive and Deductive Reasoning
  • 6 The Biblical Basis for the Laws of Logic
  • 7 Logical Failure of the Unbiblical Worldview
  • 8 Is the Christian Faith Illogical?
  • 9 Is Faith Contrary to Reason?
  • 10 Arbitrariness and Inconsistency
  • 11 Definitions
  • 12 A Brief Introduction to Syllogisms
  • 13 Enthymemes
  • 14 Informal Logical Fallacies
  • 15 Equivocation
  • 16 Reification
  • 17 The Fallacy of Accent
  • 18 The Fallacies of Compositions and Division
  • 19 Hasty Generalization and Sweeping Generalization
  • 20 The Fallacy of False Cause
  • 21 Begging the Question
  • 22 Begging the Question -Part 2
  • 23 The Question- Begging Epithet
  • 24 The Complex Question
  • 25 The Bifurcation Fallacy
  • 26 The No True Scotsman Fallacy
  • 27 Special Pleading
  • 28 The False Analogy and the Slippery Slope Fallacy
  • 29 Review of the Fallacies of Presumption
  • 30 Ad Hominem
  • 31 The Faulty Appeal to Authority
  • 32 The StrawMan Fallacy
  • 33 Faulty Appeals
  • 34 Naturalistic, Moralistic, and the Appeal to Consequences
  • 35 The Genetic Fallacy and the Tu Quoque Fallacy
  • 36 The Fallacy of Irrelevant Thesis
  • 37 Review of Fallacies of Relevance
  • 38 Closing Remarks

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