Learn logic with beavis and butthead!
| Abstract | A work in progress, where our two friends exemplify logical fallacies, types of causation and other cool stuff. Quotations are from memory, and so may not be entirely accurate, e.g. I may have substituted "buttmunch" for "buttknocker"... | |||||||||
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Sarai Hedges (1999). Do Students Learn in My Logic Class. Teaching Philosophy 22 (2):141-159.
Stephen Crain & Drew Khlentzos (2010). The Logic Instinct. Mind and Language 25 (1):30-65.
Frances Howard-Snyder (2012). The Power of Logic. Mcgraw-Hill.
C. Grant Luckhardt (1994). How to Do Things with Logic. L. Erlbaum Associates.
Petr Hájek (2006). Mathematical Fuzzy Logic – What It Can Learn From Mostowski and Rasiowa. Studia Logica 84 (1):51 - 62.
Arthur B. Cody (2002). Words, You, and Me. Inquiry 45 (3):277 – 293.
E. Kerr Borthwick (1989). Insects in Antiquity Ian C. Beavis: Insects and Other Invertebrates in Classical Antiquity. (Exeter University Publications.) Pp. Xv + 269. Oxford: Alden Press (for University of Exeter), 1988. £40. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 39 (02):362-364.
Christopher Winch (2008). Learning How to Learn: A Critique. Journal of Philosophy of Education 42 (3-4):649-665.
Jonathan Barnes (2007/2009). Truth, Etc.: Six Lectures on Ancient Logic. Oxford University Press.
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