premiss

[US]/'premis/
Frequency: Very High

Translation

n. premise
Word Forms
Pluralpremisses
Third Person Singularpremisses
Past Participlepremissed
Past Tensepremissed
Present Participlepremissing

Phrases & Collocations

logical premiss

essential premiss

Example Sentences

The premiss of the argument was flawed.

It is important to establish a solid premiss before making any decisions.

The conclusion does not follow logically from the premisses.

The premisses of the research study were carefully chosen.

The premisses upon which the theory is based are questionable.

The premiss that all humans are inherently good is debatable.

Without a valid premiss, the argument falls apart.

The premisses need to be clearly stated at the beginning of the presentation.

The premisses of the contract were agreed upon by both parties.

It is essential to critically evaluate the premisses of any scientific theory.

Real-world Examples

" Cogito, ergo sum" would be regarded by most people as having a true premiss.

Source: Analysis of the Heart (Part 1)

Thus, though wrong in her premisses, Viviette had intuitively decided with sad precision.

Source: Lovers in the Tower (Part Two)

If any one asks: 'Why should I accept the results of valid arguments based on true premisses'?

Source: Philosophical question

We may say: 'Derivative knowledge is what is validly deduced from premisses known intuitively'.

Source: Philosophical question

This, however, is a circular definition: it assumes that we already know what is meant by 'known premisses'.

Source: Philosophical question

Thus we shall have to amend our definition by saying that knowledge is what is validly deduced from known premisses.

Source: Philosophical question

Contemporary economists, who might hesitate to agree with Mill, do not hesitate to accept conclusions which require Mill's doctrine as their premiss.

Source: Employment, Interest, and General Theory of Money (Volume 1)

In the first place, it is too wide, because it is not enough that our premisses should be true, they must also be known.

Source: Philosophical question

The inductive principle has less self-evidence than some of the other principles of logic, such as 'what follows from a true premiss must be true'.

Source: Philosophical question

In like manner, a true belief cannot be called knowledge when it is deduced by a fallacious process of reasoning, even if the premisses from which it is deduced are true.

Source: Philosophical question

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