| A. |
A step of the mind whereby someone concludes that something is true based on something else being true or seeming to be true.
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| B. |
The idea that nothing can be proven to be true.
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| C. |
Those things that humans take for granted based on their past experiential knowledge.
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| D. |
General categories or ideas that humans use to interpret and classify the information that comes into their thinking.
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| E. |
Cognitive material that humans take into their minds but do not understand.
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| F. |
Information that is taken into the mind that is true, understood, and that leads to further illumination.
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| G. |
The frame of reference, perspective, or worldview that underlies one’s reasoning.
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| H. |
Data, facts, and observations that are used by human reason to understand its reality.
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| I. |
The goal of objective of thinking.
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| J. |
Taking into the mind information that is false and using it as if it were true.
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