Can an argument have more than one disjunctive premise?
A) Yes, because sometimes more than one disjunctive proposition is required to express a large number of possibilities.
B) Yes, there is no limit to the number of disjunctive premises.
C) Yes, because there must be one disjunctive premise for every categorical premise.
D) No, because that would require the argument to have two different conclusions.
E) No, because only one disjunct can be true, so every disjunctive premise after the first would consist entirely of false disjuncts.
Correct Answer:
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Q41: Which disjunctive proposition is logically equivalent to
Q42: Does every disjunctive proposition have an equivalent
Q43: What is the contrapositive of the proposition
Q44: The "if" part of a hypothetical proposition
Q45: In a true hypothetical proposition:
A)the truth of
Q47: Hypothetical propositions are most like which type
Q48: The "then" part of a hypothetical proposition
Q49: What is the converse of the proposition
Q50: Which disjunctive proposition is logically equivalent to
Q51: What is the consequent of the proposition
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