Introduction to Logic (Curriculum Pack)
$53.98
$86.37
Description Product Details Reviews (0) Overview This Introduction to Logic homeschool curriculum will both challenge and inspire 8th to 10th grade students to defend their faith against atheists and skeptics alike. This biblical worldview course teaches methods that are reliable and effective in defending the truth of the Bible. Your students will grow in their ability to refute the untruths that evolutionists claim as fact. Lessons can be completed in approximately 30 to 45 minutes and are scheduled five days a week. What’s Included 1 x Introduction to Logic (Teacher Guide) 1 x Introduction to Logic More Information Logic is the way God thinks. Master Books’ Introduction to Logic curriculum for 8th-10th grade homeschool students teaches the principles of correct reasoning from the biblical worldview. Just imagine the world changer your student will become as he or she begins to think and reason the way God does! We know that God determines the correct way to reason. He is the standard for all truth claims. In this course, students will learn about logic, if faith is contrary to reason, informal logical fallacies, and more. Learning logical terms and principles is often like learning a foreign language. This course has been developed to help your students learn the practical understanding of logical arguments. To make the course content easier to grasp, the schedule provides worksheets and practice sheets to help students better recognize logical fallacies, as well as review weeks for the quizzes and the final. In this highly recommended course, Dr. Jason Lisle addresses topics such as these: Why logic matters and who decides what is the “right” way to think? If two people disagree on whether something is reasonable, who is correct? The standard by which we judge a particular line of reasoning to be correct or incorrect? Parents love the biblical foundation provided by Dr. Lisle and how it deepens their child’s relationship with God. Many homeschool moms report having their students take this course even if they have already completed a different logic course because of the biblical worldview it offers. Often, parents purchase this course for their own independent study or use it as a family study. Dr. Jason Lisle offers supplemental video instruction for this curriculum at MasterBooksAcademy.com. A video for each chapter is available to help the student better understand the material. This online course is online course is optional. Course Components Introduction to Logic (Student Text) Introduction to Logic (Teacher Guide) Introduction to Logic Video Instruction at MasterBooksAcademy.com (Optional) Introduction to Logic includes: Convenient Daily Schedule—saving you time! Engaging 30-45 minute lessons Full-color student text Perforated, 3-hole punched worksheets for each reading portion Quizzes, tests, and answer key Recommended for: Grades 8-10 / 1 Year / 1 Credit Table of Contents 1. Logic and the Christian Worldview 2. All Knowledge Is Ultimately from God 3. Why Study Logic? 4. Propositions and Arguments 5. Inductive and Deductive Reasoning 6. The Biblical Basis for the Laws of Logic 7. Logical Failure of the Unbiblical Worldview 8. Is the Christian Faith Illogical? 9. Is Faith Contrary to Reason? 10. Arbitrariness and Inconsistency 11. Definitions 12. A Brief Introduction to Syllogisms 13. Enthymemes 14. Informal Logical Fallacies 15. Equivocation 16. Reification 17. The Fallacy of Accent 18. The Fallacies of Composition and Division 19. Hasty Generalization and Sweeping Generalization 20. The Fallacy of False Cause 21. Begging the Question 22. Begging the Question — Part 2 23. The Question-Begging Epithet 24. The Complex Question 25. The Bifurcation Fallacy 26. The No True Scotsman Fallacy 27. Special Pleading 28. The False Analogy and the Slippery Slope Fallacy 29. Review of the Fallacies of Presumption 30. Ad Hominem 31. The Faulty Appeal to Authority 32. The StrawMan Fallacy 33. Faulty Appeals 34. Naturalistic, Moralistic, and the Appeal to Consequences 35. The Genetic Fallacy and the Tu Quoque Fallacy 36. The Fallacy of Irrelevant Thesis 37. Review of Fallacies of Relevance 38. Closing Remarks Glossary/Index Informal Fallacies at a Glance Quick Reference Guide
Logic