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The habit of experiencing one sensation followed by another (for example, eating chocolate ice cream followed by pleasant satisfaction of hunger).
{ 1 } - leads to a type of reasoning called moral because the Latin word "mos, moris" means custom or habit.
{ 2 } - does not mean habit in the sense of custom.
{ 3 } - is not the basis of inductive reasoning about future events.
{ 4 } - allows us to deduce with certainty that eating chocolate ice cream will pleasantly satisfy hunger.
{ 5 } - assures us that the second sensation will always follow the first.
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1 is correct!
The habit of experiencing one sensation followed by another (for example, eating chocolate ice cream followed by pleasant satisfaction of hunger).
{ 1 } - leads to a type of reasoning called moral because the Latin word "mos, moris" means custom or habit.
{ 2 } - does not mean habit in the sense of custom.
{ 3 } - is not the basis of inductive reasoning about future events.
{ 4 } - allows us to deduce with certainty that eating chocolate ice cream will pleasantly satisfy hunger.
{ 5 } - assures us that the second sensation will always follow the first.
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Before continuing, you might try some wrong answers.
2 is wrong. Please try again.
The habit of experiencing one sensation followed by another (for example, eating chocolate ice cream followed by pleasant satisfaction of hunger).
{ 1 } - leads to a type of reasoning called moral because the Latin word "mos, moris" means custom or habit.
{ 2 } - does not mean habit in the sense of custom.
{ 3 } - is not the basis of inductive reasoning about future events.
{ 4 } - allows us to deduce with certainty that eating chocolate ice cream will pleasantly satisfy hunger.
{ 5 } - assures us that the second sensation will always follow the first.
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3 is wrong. Please try again.
The habit of experiencing one sensation followed by another (for example, eating chocolate ice cream followed by pleasant satisfaction of hunger).
{ 1 } - leads to a type of reasoning called moral because the Latin word "mos, moris" means custom or habit.
{ 2 } - does not mean habit in the sense of custom.
{ 3 } - is not the basis of inductive reasoning about future events.
{ 4 } - allows us to deduce with certainty that eating chocolate ice cream will pleasantly satisfy hunger.
{ 5 } - assures us that the second sensation will always follow the first.
It is the basis for reasoning that eating chocolate ice cream will always pleasantly satisfy hunger.
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4 is wrong. Please try again.
The habit of experiencing one sensation followed by another (for example, eating chocolate ice cream followed by pleasant satisfaction of hunger).
{ 1 } - leads to a type of reasoning called moral because the Latin word "mos, moris" means custom or habit.
{ 2 } - does not mean habit in the sense of custom.
{ 3 } - is not the basis of inductive reasoning about future events.
{ 4 } - allows us to deduce with certainty that eating chocolate ice cream will pleasantly satisfy hunger.
{ 5 } - assures us that the second sensation will always follow the first.
It allows for inductive reasoning, not deductive or demonstrative reasoning which leads from true premises to true conclusions.
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5 is wrong. Please try again.
The habit of experiencing one sensation followed by another (for example, eating chocolate ice cream followed by pleasant satisfaction of hunger).
{ 1 } - leads to a type of reasoning called moral because the Latin word "mos, moris" means custom or habit.
{ 2 } - does not mean habit in the sense of custom.
{ 3 } - is not the basis of inductive reasoning about future events.
{ 4 } - allows us to deduce with certainty that eating chocolate ice cream will pleasantly satisfy hunger.
{ 5 } - assures us that the second sensation will always follow the first.
No, for inductive reasoning is not valid and only leads to probabilities.
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the end