Difference between revisions of "Introduction to Logic"
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{{CAA courses}} | {{CAA courses}} | ||
− | [[Introduction to Logic]] ([[Introduction to Logic|ILOG]]) is a [[CAA]] course in which you learn the basics of Logic. It is offered at [[Bristol]], [[Santa Cruz]] | + | [[Introduction to Logic]] ([[Introduction to Logic|ILOG]]) is a [[CAA]] course in which you learn the basics of Logic. It is offered at [[Bristol]], [[Santa Cruz]], [[Easton]], and [[Haverford]]. This course has no prerequisites. |
==Course Description== | ==Course Description== | ||
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[[Category: Courses]] | [[Category: Courses]] | ||
+ | [[Category: Bristol]] | ||
+ | [[Category: Bethlehem]] | ||
+ | [[Category: Easton]] | ||
+ | [[Category: Frederick]] | ||
+ | [[Category: Haverford]] | ||
+ | [[Category: Hong Kong]] | ||
+ | [[Category: Hawaii (KNE)]] | ||
+ | [[Category: Santa Cruz]] | ||
+ | [[Category: Thousand Oaks]] |
Revision as of 14:23, 24 September 2017
Introduction to Logic (ILOG) is a CAA course in which you learn the basics of Logic. It is offered at Bristol, Santa Cruz, Easton, and Haverford. This course has no prerequisites.
Course Description
From the CTY Sumner Catalog of 2016:
Students learn to produce valid arguments and to differentiate valid from fallacious reasoning. They apply these skills to texts such as Plato’s writings about the trial and death of Socrates, political speeches, and current events blogs. Students participate in discussions, work problem sets, write proofs, and construct arguments relevant to current topics in both philosophy and modern society, substantially strengthening their analytical-reasoning and critical-thinking skills.
Note: While this is a humanities class, students are asked to use symbolic notation and write proofs, much like they do in math classes.