If all A are B and some B are C, are all A necessarily C?
Consider the following logical statements: 1. All A are B. 2. Some B are C. Based only on these premises, can we logically conclude that all A are C...
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Consider the following logical statements: 1. All A are B. 2. Some B are C. Based only on these premises, can we logically conclude that all A are C...
Read full explanationYou are given the following information: 1. Tom is taller than Anna. 2. Anna is taller than Lisa. Using logical reasoning, determine who is the tall...
Read full explanationYou are standing outside a closed room. Inside the room is a single light bulb. Outside the room are three switches: - One switch controls the light ...
Read full explanationConsider the following statements: 1. All roses are flowers. 2. Some flowers fade quickly. Which of the following conclusions can be logically drawn...
Read full explanationLook at the following sequence of numbers: 2, 6, 12, 20, 30, ? What number comes next?...
Read full explanationYou are in a room with two doors. One door leads to freedom, the other to certain death. Guarding the doors are two guards: - One guard always tells ...
Read full explanationA farmer needs to transport a fox, a chicken, and a bag of grain across a river. Constraints: - The boat can only carry the farmer and one item at a ...
Read full explanationIf all cats are animals, does that mean every animal is a cat?...
Read full explanationWhat number comes next in this sequence: 2, 4, 6, 8, ?...
Read full explanationIn classical logic, can a statement be both true and false at the same time?...
Read full explanationAlice, Bob, and Carol are standing in line. Alice is not first. Carol is not last. Bob is not in the middle. Who is in the middle?...
Read full explanationPremise 1: All birds can fly. Premise 2: Penguins are birds. Conclusion: Therefore, penguins can fly. Is this argument valid or invalid?...
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