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The two types of judgment for Kant are

    { 1 } - synthetic and ampliative.
    { 2 } - are determined by whether or not the concept of the predicate is contained in the concept of the subject.
    { 3 } - dependent on the principle of non-contradiction.
    { 4 } - are exemplified in the proposition "all bodies are heavy."
    { 5 } - analytic and explicative.

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1 is wrong. Please try again.

The two types of judgment for Kant are

    { 1 } - synthetic and ampliative.
    { 2 } - are determined by whether or not the concept of the predicate is contained in the concept of the subject.
    { 3 } - dependent on the principle of non-contradiction.
    { 4 } - are exemplified in the proposition "all bodies are heavy."
    { 5 } - analytic and explicative.

These are synonyms.

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2 is correct!

The two types of judgment for Kant are

    { 1 } - synthetic and ampliative.
    { 2 } - are determined by whether or not the concept of the predicate is contained in the concept of the subject.
    { 3 } - dependent on the principle of non-contradiction.
    { 4 } - are exemplified in the proposition "all bodies are heavy."
    { 5 } - analytic and explicative.

The former is called analytic and the latter synthetic.

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3 is wrong. Please try again.

The two types of judgment for Kant are

    { 1 } - synthetic and ampliative.
    { 2 } - are determined by whether or not the concept of the predicate is contained in the concept of the subject.
    { 3 } - dependent on the principle of non-contradiction.
    { 4 } - are exemplified in the proposition "all bodies are heavy."
    { 5 } - analytic and explicative.

No, only denial of an analytic judgment involves self-contradiction.

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4 is wrong. Please try again.

The two types of judgment for Kant are

    { 1 } - synthetic and ampliative.
    { 2 } - are determined by whether or not the concept of the predicate is contained in the concept of the subject.
    { 3 } - dependent on the principle of non-contradiction.
    { 4 } - are exemplified in the proposition "all bodies are heavy."
    { 5 } - analytic and explicative.

No, that is an example of a synthetic judgment for Kant. See p. 219.

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5 is wrong. Please try again.

The two types of judgment for Kant are

    { 1 } - synthetic and ampliative.
    { 2 } - are determined by whether or not the concept of the predicate is contained in the concept of the subject.
    { 3 } - dependent on the principle of non-contradiction.
    { 4 } - are exemplified in the proposition "all bodies are heavy."
    { 5 } - analytic and explicative.

These are synonyms. See p. 219.

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