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Logic 136

determine.
That which remains of a Proposition after removal of its Subject is a term (a rhema) called its Predicate.
That which remains of an Argument when its conclusion is removed is called a Proposition called it Premiss ot (since it is ordinarily copulative) more usually its Premisses.
All these matters will require minute extermination - the precise significant characters of the Term, The Proposition, the Argument, The Subject, The Predicate, the Conclusion, the Premisses.
Many important divisions of Terms and Propositions will be considered.
I here only specify a division of Arguments.

Argument is of three Kinds; Deduction, Induction and Abduction (usually called adopting a hypothesis.)
An Obsistent Argument, or Deduction, is an argument representing facts in the Premiss such that when we come to represent them in a diagram

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