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Some Related Sentences

Affirming and consequent
* Affirming the consequent
* Affirming the consequent
* Affirming the consequent and Denying the antecedent: draws a conclusion from premises that do not support that conclusion by confusing necessary and sufficient conditions.
** Affirming the consequent Example:
Affirming the consequent is essentially the same as the fallacy of the undistributed middle, but using propositions rather than set membership.
* Affirming the consequent
Affirming the consequent -
* Affirming the consequent
Abacus logic -- Abduction ( logic ) -- Abductive validation -- Affine logic -- Affirming the antecedent -- Affirming the consequent -- Antecedent -- Antinomy --
* Affirming the consequent
# REDIRECT Affirming the consequent

Affirming and is
Another such organization is the Affirming Pentecostal Church International, currently the largest affirming Pentecostal organization, with churches in the US, UK, Central and South America, Europe and Africa.
The more " progressive " or " liberal " style of Anglo-Catholicism is represented by Affirming Catholicism.
Affirming a disjunct is a fallacy when in the following form:
Affirming once more that the Fourth Geneva Convention relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War of 12 August 1949 1 / is applicable to the Arab territories occupied by Israel since 1967, including Jerusalem,
Affirming Catholicism is a movement operating in several provinces of the Anglican Communion, most notably in the UK, Ireland, the United States ( where it is known as Affirming Anglican Catholicism or AAC ) and Canada.
Among schools of theological education, CTS is especially friendly to gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender concerns and is listed as an officially " Open and Affirming " institution of the United Church of Christ by the UCC Coalition for GLBT Concerns.
The Association of Welcoming and Affirming Baptists ( AWAB ) is a group consisting of Baptist individuals, organizations, and congregations that are committed to advocating and encouraging the full inclusion of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender persons in the lives and ministries of Baptist churches.
Affirming that the " Church's first purpose is to be the sacrament of the inner union of men with God " ( CCC 775 ), John Paul II, in the Apostolic Letter At the Beginning of the New Millennium, placed sanctity, " this high standard of ordinary Christian living ," as the single most important priority of all pastoral activities in the universal Church " for all times.
Open and Affirming ( ONA ) is an official designation of congregations and other settings within the United Church of Christ ( UCC ) denomination affirming the full inclusion of gays, lesbians, bisexuals and transgender persons ( LGBT ) in that setting's life and ministry.
The Open and Affirming program is administered by the UCC Coalition for LGBT Concerns, which supports congregations and other church settings as they consider adoption of an ONA covenant and maintains the official list of ONA settings.
The website of the United Church of Christ has stated, " The United Church of Christ seeks to be Multiracial, Multicultural, Open and Affirming, and Accessible to All-A Church where everyone is welcome ".

Affirming and by
Culturally competent school counselors: Affirming diversity by challenging oppression.
Affirming the District Court, the Supreme Court held, in an opinion authored by Justice Anthony M. Kennedy, that Section 505 was a content-based restriction because the provision singled out not only particular programming but also particular programmers.
The FWC website states that " his perspective on human sexuality has been affirmed by General Synods in “ non-binding ” resolutions summarized by the ' Open and Affirming ' movement.

Affirming and form
Affirming the disjunct should not be confused with the valid form known as the disjunctive syllogism.

consequent and sometimes
The change in Athenian foreign policy, which was consequent upon the ostracism of Cimon in 461, led to what is sometimes called the First Peloponnesian War, in which the brunt of the fighting fell upon Corinth and Aegina.
The numbers A and B are sometimes called terms with A being the antecedent and B being the consequent.
In logic and mathematics, the logical biconditional ( sometimes known as the material biconditional ) is the logical connective of two statements asserting " p if and only if q ", where q is a hypothesis ( or antecedent ) and p is a conclusion ( or consequent ).
In his letter of 27 May 2007 to the Catholics in the People's Republic of China, Pope Benedict XVI acknowledged their faithfulness to Christ and the Church, " sometimes at the price of grave sufferings ", but also expressed concern at some aspects of ecclesial life in the country, in particular the division caused by " the significant part played by entities that have been imposed as the principal determinants of the life of the Catholic community ", so that " persons who are not ordained, and sometimes not even baptized, control and take decisions concerning important ecclesial questions, including the appointment of Bishops, in the name of various State agencies ", with a consequent " demeaning of the Petrine and episcopal ministries ".
The terms are sometimes used as synonyms, although this is technically inaccurate as the thrombosis refers to the occlusion, while the infarction refers to the necrosis due to the consequent loss of perfusion.
Later in its life, after mechanical wear has increased the spacing between the piston and the cylinder ( with a consequent decrease in power output ) the cylinders may be machined to a slightly larger diameter to receive new sleeves ( where applicable ) and piston rings, a process sometimes known as reboring.
There is always consequent damage and in some cases ( Passenger primarily and even sometimes in freight railroads ) injury and / or death.
As a result, he would sometimes remove all his clothing, which resulted in the consequent attendance of police officers.
* recurrence of food-price inflation ( sometimes resulting in famine ), and consequent civil disturbances, in 949, 952, 955, and 963-968.
Mordecai's consequent three-run double blew the game open highlighting the Cubs ' subsequent historic collapse in what is sometimes referred to as simply " The Inning ".

consequent and called
The proposition to the left of the arrow is called the antecedent and the proposition to the right is called the consequent.
In the Galileo affair, the acceptance, from 1616 to 1757, of the Greek geocentric model ( Ptolemaic system ) by the Roman Catholic Church, and its consequent opposition to heliocentrism, was first called into question by the Catholic cleric Copernicus, and subsequently disproved conclusively by Galileo, who was persecuted for his minority view.
In this case A is called the hypothesis of the theorem ( note that " hypothesis " here is something very different from a conjecture ) and B the conclusion ( A and B can also be denoted the antecedent and consequent ).
As discussed earlier, the processing stage is based on a collection of logic rules in the form of IF-THEN statements, where the IF part is called the " antecedent " and the THEN part is called the " consequent ".
The problem was that whoever gave the order to retreat would be blamed for losing the capital and face harsh criticism from the Chinese public, Tang was very reluctant to bear this responsibility and the consequent blame alone, so he called a meeting of all senior commanders, and he showed them Chiang Kai-shek's permission to retreat when needed, a decision to be made by Tang's headquarters.
In the U. S. and Canada, the vast distances and consequent burdens on cross-country travel have led to regional groupings of teams, usually called divisions.
This was defective, as it allowed, as in the old smooth-bore guns, the powder gas to escape by the clearance ( called " windage ") between the projectile and the bore, with a consequent loss of efficiency ; it also quickly eroded the bore of the larger guns.
The consequent half ( second measure ) of clave has two strokes and is called the two-side by salsa musicians.
This sort of non sequitur is also called affirming the consequent.
In 1666 Séguier was placed at the head of a commission called to simplify the police organization, especially that of Paris ; and the consequent ordinances of 1667 and 1670 for the better administration of justice were drawn up by him.
Relevance logic, also called relevant logic, is a kind of non-classical logic requiring the antecedent and consequent of implications be relevantly related.
When an implication is translated by a hypothetical ( or conditional ) judgment the antecedent is called the hypothesis ( or the condition ) and the consequent is called the thesis.
Fellow engineers such as Joseph Locke and Brunel who were called as witnesses at the consequent enquiry refused to criticise Stephenson, even though they rarely used cast iron themselves.
This logical fallacy is called affirming the consequent.
However, Millar's admission to using the illegal drug EPO and consequent expulsion from the Great Britain squad for the 2004 Summer Olympics meant that Dangerfield was called up into the Olympic squad to race the time trial.
In an implication, if implies then is called the antecedent and is called the consequent.
In an implication, if implies then is called the antecedent and is called the consequent.

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