Logic and Analysis Course For Self Study: Self Study License
Logic and Analysis Course For Self Study: Self Study License
Logic and Analysis Course For Self Study: Self Study License
Copyright
©
2010
by
Jon
Rappoport
SPECIAL
INTRODUCTION
TO
THE
LOGIC
COURSE
FOR
SELFSTUDY
FOR
THOSE
PEOPLE
RECEIVING
THE
COURSE
AS
PART
OF
THE
MATRIX
REVEALED
VOLUME
1
COPYRIGHT
NOTICE
LOGIC
AND
ANALYSIS
COURSE
FOR
SELFSTUDY
By
Jon
Rappoport
Copyright
©
2010
by
Jon
Rappoport
[email protected]
SELFSTUDY
LICENSE:
You
are
invited
to
use
this
course
for
selfstudy.
However,
teaching
it
to
another
person
would
require
another
purchase
price
and
explicit
okay
from
me.
I
rely
on
your
honor
in
this
situation.
Of
course,
copying
the
materials
for
another
person,
selling
it,
or
giving
it
away
are
not
permitted.
This
course
is
for
you
only.
Thank
you.
Introduction:
Logic
was
the
discovery/invention
of
the
ancient
Greeks,
who,
for
the
first
time,
developed
it
in
written
form.
It
was
primarily
the
work
of
Aristotle
and
Plato.
From
logic
flowed
myriad
possibilities
for
the
human
race,
including
the
sciences
and
the
scientific
method.
At
one
time,
some
form
of
logic
was
widely
taught
in
secondary
schools.
Now,
we
see
almost
nothing
of
the
tradition.
Therefore,
students
don't
grasp
the
progress
of
thought
and
reasoning
from
beginning
to
end—nor
can
they
find
flaws
in
that
flow.
This
a
hidden
cause
for
what
is
inappropriately
called
ADHD.
When
attention
has
nothing
to
hold
on
to,
it
is
fragmented.
It
wanders.
There
are
worlds
and
dimensions
beyond
logic,
but
without
understanding
exactly
what
one
is
departing
from,
the
ensuing
journeys
often
dead‐end
in
confusion.
Logic
is
a
vital
tool.
It
can
be
used
to
analyze
any
presentation
of
information
or
argument,
and
in
this
age
of
information
overload,
it
is
indispensable.
When
one
knows
the
difference
between,
on
the
one
hand,
opinion,
suggestion,
guess,
belief,
surmise,
and,
on
the
other
hand,
argument
which
tries
to
arrive
at
a
true
conclusion,
one
is
ahead
of
the
game—and
when
one
can
take
apart
a
serious
argument
and
find
what
is
specifically
reasonable
and
what
is
unreasonable
about
it,
one
is
in
very
good
shape
indeed.
Logic
and
Analysis
Course
for
Self‐Study:
Self‐Study
License
Copyright
©
2010
by
Jon
Rappoport
This
18‐lesson
course
is
a
solid
starting
point.
It
is
entirely
contained
in
the
teacher's
manual
and
the
accompanying
MP3
audio
files.
You
study
the
course
by
going
through
each
lesson
in
sequence,
as
presented.
I
suggest
you
do
the
whole
course
several
times
from
beginning
to
end,
to
extract
the
full
value.
Much
success,
Jon
Rappoport
[email protected]