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Doing Philosophy: An Introduction Through Thought Experiments, 2/e
Theodore Schick, Muhlenberg College
Lewis Vaughn

The Philosophical Enterprise

argument  A group of statements consisting of one or more premises and a conclusion that purportedly follows from the premises.
causal impossibility  Something is causally impossible if and only if it violates a law of nature.
cogent argument  A strong inductive argument that contains only true premises.
conclusion  The claim that an argument is trying to establish.
counterexample  An example that runs counter to or conflicts with a theory.
criteria of adequacy  The features that distinguish a good theory from a bad one: consistency (lack of contradictions), simplicity (quality of relying on only a small number of assumptions), scope (the amount of diverse phenomena explained), , conservatism (quality of fitting well with existing theory), and fruitfulness (the number of new facts predicted or problems.
law of noncontradiction  The principle that nothing can both have and lack a property at the same time and in the same respect.
logical impossibility  Something is logically impossible if and only if it violates the law of noncontradiction.
mind-body problem  The philosophical problem of explaining how it is possible for a material object to have a mind.
necessary condition  Something x is a necessary condition for something y if and only if it is impossible for y to exist without x.
premise  A reasongiven for accepting the conclusion of an argument.
problem of evil  The philosophical problem of explaining how it is possible for there to be evil in a world created by an all-powerful, all-knowing, and all-good being.
problem of free will  The philosophical problem of explaining how it is possible for a causally determined action to be free.
problem of moral relativism  The philosophical problem of explaining how it is possible for there to be absolute moral standards.
problem of personal identity  The philosophical problem of explaining how it is possible for a person to change and yet remain the same person.
problem of skepticism  The philosophical problem of explaining how it is possible for there to be knowledge.
sound argument  A valid deductive argument that contains only true premises.
strong argument  An inductive argument which would establish its conclusion with a gih degree of probability if its premises were true.
sufficient condition  Something x is a sufficient condition for something y if and only if it is impossible for x to exist without y.
test implication  A statement to the effect that if a theory is true, then a certain concept (event) should apply (occur) in a certain situation.
thought experiment  An imaginary situation designed to determine whether a claim is necessarily true.
valid argument  A deductive argument in which the conclusion logically follows from its premises.