Proposición categórica (Spanish Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Proposición categórica" in Spanish language version.

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archive.org

  • Churchill, Robert Paul (1990). Logic: An Introduction (en inglés) (2da edición). Nueva York: St. Martin's Press. p. 143. ISBN 0-312-02353-7. OCLC 21216829. «A categorical statement is an assertion or a denial that all or some members of the subject class are included in the predicate class.» 
  • Churchill, Robert Paul (1990). Logic: An Introduction (en inglés) (2da edición). Nueva York: St. Martin's Press. p. 144. ISBN 0-312-02353-7. OCLC 21216829. «During the Middle Ages, logicians gave the four categorical forms the special names of A, E, I, and O. These four letters came from the first two vowels in the Latin word 'affirmo' ('I affirm') and the vowels in the Latin 'nego' ('I deny').» 

books.google.com

  • Hausman, Alan; Kahane, Howard; Tidman, Paul (2010). Logic and Philosophy: A Modern Introduction (en inglés) (11.ª edición). Australia: Thomson Wadsworth/Cengage learning. p. 326. ISBN 9780495601586. Consultado el 26 de febrero de 2013. «In the process of obversion, we change the quality of a proposition (from affirmative to negative or from negative to affirmative), and then replace its predicate with the negation or complement of the predicate.» 

cengagebrain.com

  • Hausman, Alan; Kahane, Howard; Tidman, Paul (2010). Logic and Philosophy: A Modern Introduction (en inglés) (11.ª edición). Australia: Thomson Wadsworth/Cengage learning. p. 326. ISBN 9780495601586. Consultado el 26 de febrero de 2013. «In the process of obversion, we change the quality of a proposition (from affirmative to negative or from negative to affirmative), and then replace its predicate with the negation or complement of the predicate.» 

projecteuclid.org

stanford.edu

plato.stanford.edu

worldcat.org

  • Churchill, Robert Paul (1990). Logic: An Introduction (en inglés) (2da edición). Nueva York: St. Martin's Press. p. 143. ISBN 0-312-02353-7. OCLC 21216829. «A categorical statement is an assertion or a denial that all or some members of the subject class are included in the predicate class.» 
  • Churchill, Robert Paul (1990). Logic: An Introduction (en inglés) (2da edición). Nueva York: St. Martin's Press. p. 144. ISBN 0-312-02353-7. OCLC 21216829. «During the Middle Ages, logicians gave the four categorical forms the special names of A, E, I, and O. These four letters came from the first two vowels in the Latin word 'affirmo' ('I affirm') and the vowels in the Latin 'nego' ('I deny').»