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syllogism
syllogism \SIL-uh-jiz-um\
noun
Syllogism refers to a formal argument in logic that is formed by two statements and a conclusion which must be true if the two statements are true.
// An example of a syllogism is “All men are mortal; no gods are mortal; therefore no men are gods.”
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Examples:
“The Dallas area was a hotbed of competitive debate, and, at first, the oratorical polish of [Rebecca F.] Kuang’s teammates was intimidating. She spent months being coached on the art of the
syllogism, a kind of logical argument in which one deduces a conclusion from a set of premises. ‘The idea that you could take something that seemed up to personal charisma or rhetorical choice and map it to this very rigid, argumentative structure was mind-blowing,’ she said.” — Hua Hsu,
The New Yorker, 25 Aug. 2025
Did you know?
For those trained in formal argument, the syllogism is a classical form of
deduction, specifically an argument consisting of a major and a minor premise and a conclusion. One example is the inference that “kindness is praiseworthy” from the premises “every virtue is praiseworthy” and “kindness is a virtue.”
Syllogism came to English through Anglo-French from the Latin noun
syllogismus, which in turn can be traced back to the Greek verb
syllogizesthai, which combines
logizesthai (meaning “to calculate,” and coming from
logos, meaning “word” or “reckoning”) with
syl-, which comes from
syn-, meaning “with” or “together.”