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Alphabetical    [«  »]
fallacy 7
falling 2
falls 18
false 44
falsehood 4
falsehoods 1
falsely 3
Frequency    [«  »]
45 intelligible
44 admit
44 differentiae
44 false
44 sometimes
44 virtue
43 opinion
Aristotle
Topics

IntraText - Concordances

false

   Book, Paragraph
1 I, 1 | above; the man who draws a false figure reasons from things 2 I, 18| misled and to mislead by false reasoning: for if we know 3 I, 18| certainly never be misled by false reasoning, but shall know 4 I, 18| are true and others are false. This manner of argument, 5 II, 1 | kinds, caused either by false statement or by transgression 6 II, 1 | diction. For those who make false statements, and say that 7 II, 2 | the statement is true or false; e.g. if he is "jealous" 8 VI, 12| definition is clearly altogether false; while if it be a science 9 VI, 12| of another, it is partly false; for it ought to hold of 10 VI, 13| the product of courage and false opinion": here the goodness 11 VI, 13| courage exceeds the evil of false opinion; accordingly the 12 VII, 1 | which may be true or may be false (it makes no difference 13 VIII, 1 | all, as do those who draw false geometrical figures: for 14 VIII, 2 | Propositions that are partly false and partly true are of this 15 VIII, 5 | trying to teach him what is false; whereas in a competition 16 VIII, 7 | to be universally true or false, he should give it an unqualified 17 VIII, 7 | be partly true and partly false, he should add a comment 18 VIII, 7 | it is true, in the other false: for if he leave this distinction 19 VIII, 10| arguments that reason to a false conclusion the right solution 20 VIII, 10| the point demolished be false. For the argument may contain 21 VIII, 10| that the point claimed is false; but it is not on that that 22 VIII, 11| conclusions, but also to false ones, and not always through 23 VIII, 11| premisses, but sometimes through false as well. For often, when 24 VIII, 11| to demolish it: and then false propositions have to be 25 VIII, 11| formulated. Sometimes also when a false proposition is put forward, 26 VIII, 11| be demolished by means of false propositions: for it is 27 VIII, 11| whether his conclusion be false or true: what kind of syllogisms 28 VIII, 11| the conclusion rests are false or generally rejected, when, 29 VIII, 11| true conclusion by means of false premisses, it is not fair 30 VIII, 11| fair to find fault: for a false conclusion must of necessity 31 VIII, 11| always be reached from a false premiss, but a true conclusion 32 VIII, 11| sometimes be drawn even from false premisses; as is clear from 33 VIII, 12| result reached be true or false: (4) if the conclusion be 34 VIII, 12| conclusion be reached through false premisses: of this type 35 VIII, 12| conclusion is sometimes false, sometimes true: for while 36 VIII, 12| sometimes true: for while a false conclusion is always the 37 VIII, 12| is always the result of false premisses, a true conclusion 38 VIII, 12| through premisses that are false and utterly childish, the 39 VIII, 12| arguments that lead to a false conclusion, though an argument 40 VIII, 12| argument which leads to a false conclusion may also be of 41 VIII, 12| Is the conclusion true or false?"; the third, "Of what kind 42 VIII, 12| for if the latter, though false, be generally accepted, 43 VIII, 12| is bad: if they be both false and also entirely contrary 44 VIII, 14| choose the true and shun the false. Men of natural ability


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