Glossary | |
Chapter 3 | |
Absolute | An absolute is something that is perfect, complete, always true, something never to be doubted or questioned. |
Certain | Certain is a characteristic of something fixed, assured, or inevitable. |
Fact | A fact is something proven to be true, real, existing or to have existed. |
Fiction | Fiction is an idea or story based on imagination rather than reality. |
Objective/subjective | Objective is to be impartial, free of bias or prejudice. Subjective is to be swayed by bias or prejudice rather than facts and evidence. |
Plausibility | This standard weighs the reasonability of a event or explanation. |
Principal claim and reasons | These are the two parts of an argument. The principal claim is the thesis or conclusion. The reasons support this claim through evidence or other claims. A claim is an assertion about something. |
Probability | This standard estimates the likelihood that an event occurred or will occur. |
Reliability | This is another standard: that the data was confirmed to be fact by a reputable independent source. Reliability also means that the confirmation proved dependable over time. |
Thinking | Purposeful mental activity such as reasoning, deciding, judging, believing, supposing, expecting, intending, recalling, remembering, visualizing, imagining, devising, inventing, concentrating, conceiving, considering. |
Verifiability | This is a standard for determining facts; that they can be tested and confirmed to be either true and/or in existence or past existence or not. |
Verify | To verify is to test and confirm the truth, accuracy, or existence of something. |
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C3 -- Facts Glossary
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C3 -- Facts Glossary
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