Translation for "syllogistics" to spanish
Syllogistics
Translation examples
It's a syllogistic fallacy.
Es una falacia silogística.
Rituals and ceremonies are syllogistic forms too.
También los rituales y las ceremonias son formas silogísticas.
To console himself, he chewed through a series of syllogistic mantras:
Masculló algunos mantras silogísticos para consolarse:
“Well, it's more a matter of a probabilistic matrix than strict syllogistic logic-”
—Se trata más de una matriz probabilística que de una lógica estrictamente silogística
But when all syllogistic forms fall apart, everything dissolves; nothing has a stay.
En cambio, donde se descompone toda forma silogística, todo se deshace sin sostén.
Thus, where that spatial ordering of the two points of analogy intersects with the temporal, movable unknown, Licario situated what he called Poetic Syllogistics.
Así, en la intersección de ese ordenamiento espacial de los dos puntos de analogía, con el temporal móvil desconocido, situaba Licario lo que él llamaba la Silogística poética.
snakes, ghosts, earthquakes, disease, demons, magic, childbirth, menstruation, witches, afreets, incubi, succubi, solar eclipses, reading, writing, good manners, syllogistic reasoning, and what we might generally call the less reliable phenomena of life.
g., serpientes, terremotos, enfermedades, demonios, magia, partos, menstruaciones, brujas, efretis, íncubos, súcubos, eclipses solares, la lectura, la escritura, los buenos modales, el razonamiento silogístico, y lo que, en general, podríamos llamar los fenómenos menos fiables de la vida.
[Ren Descartes [1596–1650] himself took welcome time away from his syllogistic aphorisms to investigate the subject, although praise for its initial identification rightly belongs to an earlier Frenchman, the surgeon and anatomist Ambroise Par[1510–1590], royal physician to no less than four French kings, who described patients who had undergone amputation feeling continued pain, not at the site of the severing, but in the missing limb itself.
El propio [René] Descartes [1596-1650] robó tiempo a sus aforismos silogísticos para investigar el asunto, aunque el mérito de su identificación original corresponde a un francés anterior, el cirujano y anatomista Abroise Paré [1510-1590], médico de al menos cuatro reyes franceses, que habló de pacientes que, tras sufrir alguna amputación, manifestaban sentir dolores continuos no en la zona del corte, sino en el propio miembro amputado.
How many English words do you know?
Test your English vocabulary size, and measure how many words you know.
Online Test