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Reviewer Logic

The document discusses different types of concepts and terms. It defines external representation as either oral, expressed sounds or written words. Concepts can be simple, represented by a single word, or complex, represented by a group of words. Logical properties of concepts include comprehension, the meaning or connotation, and extension, examples or denotation. There are different types of concepts: absolute concepts have a complete, independent meaning while connotative concepts have an accidental meaning; concrete concepts refer to nature in substance while abstract concepts refer to an abstracted nature. Concepts can also be singular, referring to one thing, particular, referring to more than one but not all, or universal, applying to all members of a class. Comp

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
41 views3 pages

Reviewer Logic

The document discusses different types of concepts and terms. It defines external representation as either oral, expressed sounds or written words. Concepts can be simple, represented by a single word, or complex, represented by a group of words. Logical properties of concepts include comprehension, the meaning or connotation, and extension, examples or denotation. There are different types of concepts: absolute concepts have a complete, independent meaning while connotative concepts have an accidental meaning; concrete concepts refer to nature in substance while abstract concepts refer to an abstracted nature. Concepts can also be singular, referring to one thing, particular, referring to more than one but not all, or universal, applying to all members of a class. Comp

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djadordionisio
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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2.

External Representation

ORAL - Articulate/Expressed SOUND; Conventional, Arbitrary

WRITTEN - Printed or Written Word

SIMPLE - One Word to signify Subject or Predicate (A DOG is an


ANIMAL)

COMPLEX - Group of Words taken as a unit (The SPITTING COBRA


is a SCALY REPTILE

3. Logical Properties
COMPREHENSION - Meaning / Connotation of the Idea

E.G., A DOG is a barking animal.

FAMILY means Father And Mother I Love You.

EXTENSION - Example / Denotation

E.G., Shih Tzus, Dachshunds, and Beagles are dogs

1. Concept and Terms

ABSOLUTE - Complete Meaning, Independent Reality (Man is a


thinking being)

CONNOTATIVE - exists accidentally (Student, Bluish, Furry)

CONCRETE - Nature in a Substance (Man, Animal, Dog, Chair)

ABSTRACT - Abstracted Nature (Freedom, Friendship, Blindness)


5. Extension

SINGULAR - stands for ONE thing or INDIVIDUAL

(Mine, the Dalai Lama, PHINMA AU),

PARTICULAR - stands for more than one, but not all

(some cats, a few Chinese, two men)

UNIVERSAL - applies to each member of that class/group

(every Dog is Canine / All dogs are canine)

4. Comprehension

UNIVOCAL - One same, fixed Meaning (Tree, Table, Moon)

EQUIVOCAL - Two or more unrelated meanings; may be same in


pronunciation and/or in Spelling (Sweet-Suite; Sun - Son)

ANALOGOUS - partly same, partly different Meaning (HEAD -


man's head or Head of the Family ; FOOT - a baby's foot or Foot of thr
mountain))

Bong

Bong OnarimEd
Ador Dionisio, Deejay C.

1. Univocal
2. Analogous

3. Equivocal
4. Univocal
5. Analogous
6. Absolute
7. Connotative

8. Absolute
9. Concrete

10. Connotative

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