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Psychoanalysis: Meaning and Key Concepts
This lecture notes discusses the topic "psychoanalysis", defined as a set of psychological theories and therapeutic techniques with a core belief that all people possess unconscious thoughts, feelings, desires, and memories has its origin in the work of the Austrian neurologist and social philosopher Sigmund Freud.
- Class notes
- • 3 pages •
This lecture notes discusses the topic "psychoanalysis", defined as a set of psychological theories and therapeutic techniques with a core belief that all people possess unconscious thoughts, feelings, desires, and memories has its origin in the work of the Austrian neurologist and social philosopher Sigmund Freud.
Informal Fallacies: Fallacy of Division
This lecture notes discusses "fallacy of division" a type of informal fallacy which occurs when the arguer mistakenly concludes that something is true to one or some of the parts of the whole simply because it is true of the whole.
- Package deal
- Class notes
- • 2 pages •
This lecture notes discusses "fallacy of division" a type of informal fallacy which occurs when the arguer mistakenly concludes that something is true to one or some of the parts of the whole simply because it is true of the whole.
Functionalism: Meaning and Key Concepts
This lecture notes discusses the topic "functionalism", one of the major theoretical perspectives in sociology which holds the belief that society is relatively stable, which means that things occur in society for a specific function and those functions help maintain stability.
- Class notes
- • 2 pages •
This lecture notes discusses the topic "functionalism", one of the major theoretical perspectives in sociology which holds the belief that society is relatively stable, which means that things occur in society for a specific function and those functions help maintain stability.
Modernism and Postmodernism: Meaning and Key Concepts
This lecture notes discusses the topic "modernism and postmodernism". 
 
On the one hand, modernism is widely used to describe a variety of inclinations within the European and Anglo-American literature of the early twentieth century. 
 
On the other hand, postmodernism is a term applied, often loosely, to a broad movement that developed in the middle to the late twentieth century across many disciplines, such as the arts, architecture, and philosophy.
- Class notes
- • 2 pages •
This lecture notes discusses the topic "modernism and postmodernism". 
 
On the one hand, modernism is widely used to describe a variety of inclinations within the European and Anglo-American literature of the early twentieth century. 
 
On the other hand, postmodernism is a term applied, often loosely, to a broad movement that developed in the middle to the late twentieth century across many disciplines, such as the arts, architecture, and philosophy.
Informal Fallacies: Fallacy of Composition
This lecture notes discusses "fallacy of composition", a type of informal fallacy which occurs when the arguer mistakenly concludes that something is true to the whole simply because it is true to some of the parts of the whole.
- Package deal
- Class notes
- • 2 pages •
This lecture notes discusses "fallacy of composition", a type of informal fallacy which occurs when the arguer mistakenly concludes that something is true to the whole simply because it is true to some of the parts of the whole.
Informal Fallacies: Fallacy of Hasty Generalization
This lecture notes discusses "hasty generalization", a type of informal fallacy occurs when a generalization is formed on the basis of an unrepresentative sample.
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- Class notes
- • 2 pages •
This lecture notes discusses "hasty generalization", a type of informal fallacy occurs when a generalization is formed on the basis of an unrepresentative sample.
Informal Fallacies: Fallacy of Equivocation
This lecture notes discusses "fallacy of equivocation", a type of informal fallacy which occurs when a term or word switches meaning in the course of the argument, that is, when a term or word expresses one meaning in one premise and another meaning in another premise or conclusion.
- Package deal
- Class notes
- • 2 pages •
This lecture notes discusses "fallacy of equivocation", a type of informal fallacy which occurs when a term or word switches meaning in the course of the argument, that is, when a term or word expresses one meaning in one premise and another meaning in another premise or conclusion.
Either/Or Fallacy (or False Dichotomy)
This lecture notes discusses "Either/Or Fallacy", a type of informal fallacy which occurs when the arguer mistakenly reason from two alternatives, one claimed to be bad (that is, to be avoided) so that we ought to choose the other alternative.
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- Class notes
- • 2 pages •
This lecture notes discusses "Either/Or Fallacy", a type of informal fallacy which occurs when the arguer mistakenly reason from two alternatives, one claimed to be bad (that is, to be avoided) so that we ought to choose the other alternative.
Realism: Meaning and Key Concepts
This lecture discusses the topic "realism", which, in philosophy, refers to the view that the “reality” of any material objects exists in the external world independently of the human mind.
- Class notes
- • 2 pages •
This lecture discusses the topic "realism", which, in philosophy, refers to the view that the “reality” of any material objects exists in the external world independently of the human mind.
Informal Fallacies: Slippery Slope
This lecture notes discusses "slippery slope", a type of informal fallacy that arises when the arguer claims that a chain of causal events will necessarily occur.
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- Class notes
- • 2 pages •
This lecture notes discusses "slippery slope", a type of informal fallacy that arises when the arguer claims that a chain of causal events will necessarily occur.
David Hume’s Concept of the Self
Erik Erikson’s Eight Stages of Psychosocial Development
Arguments and Validity: Eight (8) Rules of Syllogism in Categorical Logic
Ethics: Definition and Major Types
Erik Erikson’s Eight Stages of Psychosocial Development