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He also asked the auctioneers to "refer the sellers to the appropriate authorities for withholding essential information of penal ground rent provisions that make the premises worthless".
Appellant's second count alleged that appellee had intentionally inflicted emotional distress upon them through his refusal to make the premises fit for human habitation; they sought $3,000 damages on the second count.
The feature of (3) that guarantees that every instance of it will be valid is its construction in such a manner that every uniform way of replacing its variables to make the premises true automatically makes the conclusion true also, or, in other words, that no instance of it can have true premises but a false conclusion.
It should not, I think, be impossible for the landlord and a prospective tenant to agree that for a reduced amount of rent, the tenant, rather than the landlord, will make such agreed upon improvements as are necessary to make the premises fit for human habitation.
Whether it is the whimsical touches like gargoyles on building facades based on longtime faculty members' features, or practical considerations like placing classrooms on only one side of the middle school so students do not have to carry backpacks from room to room, the point was to make the premises enhance how students learn.
If we try to retain the interesting conclusion, but make the premises all true, the argument will lose its soundness.
Similar(50)
Interviews with the original disco DJ Nicky Siano and historian Alice Echols make the premise more believable as well, even if Echols's theories border on the surreal.
(5) Semantical fallaciousness results from the ambiguity of terms; the conclusion will follow if the sense given to the term in the premises makes the premises false, but if the other sense is ascribed to the term, making the premises true, the conclusion does not follow (it becomes an instance of formal fallaciousness).
When possible, he does this by a clever and economical method: he gives two triplets of terms, one of which makes the premises true and a universal affirmative "conclusion" true, and the other of which makes the premises true and a universal negative "conclusion" true.
In his Perutilis logica Albert of Saxony suggested that in expository syllogisms the middle term should always be qualified by the phrase, "Everything which is," which makes the premises false in the divine case.
That the advert is actually real, placed in the September 1997 issue of US survivalist magazine Backwards Home, makes the premise all the more delicious.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com