Redirected from Epagoge
Forms of syllogism:
The Aristotle wrote the classic "Barbara" syllogism:
That is,
Metaphor, in contrast, resembles a form of syllogism called “Affirming the Consequent”:
A Barbara syllogism involves Grammar and Logical Types; it has a subject and a predicate. Affirming the Consequent, the basis of metaphor, is grammatically symmetrical: it equates two predicates. This form of syllogism is logically invalid.
Epagoge are weak syllogisms that rely on inductive reasoning.
See also:
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