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  2. Wikipedia:Verifiability, not truth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Verifiability...

    Editors may not add information to articles simply because they believe it to be true, or even if they know it to be true. The phrase "the threshold for inclusion is verifiability, not truth" meant that verifiability is a necessary condition (a minimum requirement) for the inclusion of material, though it is not a sufficient condition (it may ...

  3. List of fallacies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fallacies

    The following fallacies involve relations whose truth values are not guaranteed and therefore not guaranteed to yield true conclusions. Types of propositional fallacies: Affirming a disjunct – concluding that one disjunct of a logical disjunction must be false because the other disjunct is true; A or B; A, therefore not B .

  4. Almost surely - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Almost_surely

    In probability experiments on a finite sample space with a non-zero probability for each outcome, there is no difference between almost surely and surely (since having a probability of 1 entails including all the sample points); however, this distinction becomes important when the sample space is an infinite set, [2] because an infinite set can ...

  5. Belief - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belief

    The difference between de dicto and de re beliefs or the corresponding ascriptions concerns the contributions singular terms like names and other referential devices make to the semantic properties of the belief or its ascription. [4] [35] In regular contexts, the truth-value of a sentence does not change upon substitution of co-referring terms ...

  6. Affirmation and negation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Affirmation_and_negation

    Ways in which this constituent negation is realized depends on the grammar of the language in question. English generally places not before the negated element, as in "I witnessed not a debate, but a war." There are also negating affixes, such as the English prefixes non-, un-, in-, etc. Such elements are called privatives.

  7. Illusory truth effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illusory_truth_effect

    The first condition is logical as people compare new information with what they already know to be true and consider the credibility of both sources. However, researchers discovered that familiarity can overpower rationality—so much so that repetitively hearing that a certain fact is wrong can paradoxically cause it to feel right.

  8. Is It Just Stress...Or Perimenopause? Doctors Explain ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/just-stress-perimenopause-doctors...

    The Difference Between Perimenopause And Menopause Menopause may be a more familiar concept to most. It occurs when a woman hasn’t had her menstrual cycle for 12 consecutive months.

  9. Logical truth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logical_truth

    Logically true propositions such as "If p and q, then p" and "All married people are married" are logical truths because they are true due to their internal structure and not because of any facts of the world (whereas "All married people are happy", even if it were true, could not be true solely in virtue of its logical structure).

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