This printable crossword puzzle on the topic of Psychology & Sociology has 22 clues. Answers range from 7 to 20 letters long. This crossword is also available to download as a Microsoft Word document or a PDF.
argument that is supposed to give logically conclusive support to its conclusion
argument that is supposed to give probable support to its conclusion
the first part of a conditional premise; the "if" part
the second part of a conditional premise; the "then" part
when an argument is valid and has true premises
argument pattern that forms reasons from premises about a few members of a group to conclusions about the group as a whole
drawing conclusions about a target group based on a sample that is too small
argument where the premises are statements about the facts of a phenomenon/situation, and the explanation is a statement about why the facts are as they are
an inductive argument that succeeds in providing probable support to its premises
an inductive argument that fails to provide probable support to its premises
major branch of metaphysics; relationship between mental and physical phenomena
theory that states that body and mind are two different substances
"The Seat of the Soul"
theory that states that mental and physical phenomena run in parallel
theory that states that mental events do not cause physical ones, but there is something that links the two events together
theory that states that there is not immaterial mind, soul, or spirit
theory that provides a way to account for mental events in physical terms; view that the mind does not exist
theory that focuses on functional role of mental states; relationships between perceptions inputs and behavioral outputs; materialist theory
theory that denied that consciousness exists
theory that does not claim the brain contains 2 kinds of substances but 2 kinds of properties; hybrid of dualism and materialism
theory that states that physical events can produce mental events but not the other way around; compromise between dualism and materialism
theory that states that every mental state identical with some biological processes in the brain