It could be that 'true and false' refer to the statement in the question text and not the correctness of the answer
That's correct. The validity of an argument depends on both the form of the argument and the truth of the premises. If the premises are false, then even if the argument is logically valid, the conclusion cannot be considered true.
An argument can be logically valid, but quite demonstrably wrong, because its first premise is false.How to choose the right starting points is a difficult part, if not impossible...Who knows which axioms are "correct" ?
Yes, a deductive argument can have false premises. However, the conclusion does not follow logically if the premises are false, making the argument unsound.
The claim that the fleas in a jar experiment is true is false.
A catuskoti logical argument is a form of reasoning that allows for four possible truth values: true, false, both true and false, and neither true nor false. An example of a catuskoti argument could be: "This statement is true, this statement is false, this statement is both true and false, this statement is neither true nor false." This type of argument is often used in Eastern philosophy to explore paradoxes and contradictions.
True means it is a proven fact; it is right or correct. False means it is not correct or not true.
False
True means correct, factual. False is the opposite - it means not true or not correct.
The correct term is false ceiling. Fall ceiling isn't correct.
FALSE :)))
I think you spell it...... HOW YOU WROTE IT MAYBE?
True means that it is correct. False means it is not true.
False...UNITY is the correct answer!!
False
False. The correct muscle is the diaphragm.
Correct.
False. There are several methods.