
Brain Supplement Plan 100
Description
Book Introduction
『Brain Supplement Plan 100』 helps you develop your thinking and critical thinking skills in 100 days.
This book is designed to help you develop logical thinking and critical thinking skills by reading two pages of explanations and solving practice problems every day for 100 days.
From basic inference rules to informal fallacies, probability, logic of action, game theory, and paradoxes, this book covers everything.
This book is designed to help you develop logical thinking and critical thinking skills by reading two pages of explanations and solving practice problems every day for 100 days.
From basic inference rules to informal fallacies, probability, logic of action, game theory, and paradoxes, this book covers everything.
index
Preface | Brain Supplement Committee | Reader's Guide | Teacher/Professor's Guide | References
001 Inference, premise, conclusion | 002 Truth | 003 True | 004 False | 005 And, or, if | 006 Meaning of “and” | 007 Eliminate false | 008 Insert and | 009 Eliminate and | 010 Lead step by step | 011 Because | 012 Insert or | 013 Eliminate either | 014 Eliminate or | 015 Eliminate if | 016 Eliminate if | 017 Eliminate if | 018 Continuing | 019 Contradictory sentence | 020 Insert false | 021 Insert if | 022 Insert if | 023 Eliminate the afterwords | 024 Connect | 025 Either way 1 | 026 Either way 2 | 027 Sentence logic | 028 The meaning of “either” | 029 Is and sharing and is or sharing | 030 Gathering is false | 031 Follows | 032 Follows each other | 033 Rules for writing differently and leading step by step | 034 Must and sometimes | 035 Reversing the order of if | 036 The meaning of “if” | 037 When only then | 038 Just if and must if | 039 If this or that | 040 Must be | 041 Sufficient and necessary conditions | 042 Counterfactual conditional | 043 Consistent | 044 Unsatisfactory | 045 Format errors | 046 True and proper | 047 Strong | 048 Simple and pervasive sentences | 049 All | 050 Some
| 051 Ben Grimm | 052 Write all several differently | 053 Ben Grimm reasoning 1 | 054 Ben Grimm reasoning 2 | 055 Quantified logic 1 | 056 Quantified logic 2 | 057 Truth game | 058 Lie game | 059 Treasure chest | 060 Line up | 061 Matching | 062 Branching | 063 Scientific reasoning 1 | 064 Scientific reasoning 2 | 065 Probably reasoning | 066 Rough estimate | 067 Because it's similar | 068 Blaming | 069 Inference diagram | 070 Argument diagram | 071 Reinforcement and rebuttal | 072 Borrowing a conclusion | 073 Complaint | 074 Nonsense | 075 Ad hominem attack | 076 Biased evidence | 077 False blame | 078 Unreliable assumption | 079 Confusing words | 080 Trustworthiness | 081 Bayes's axiom | 082 False positive | 083 Simpson's trial | 084 Making up one's mind | 085 Pre-stocking | 086 Quitting smoking | 087 Pascal's Wager | 088 Nuclear armament | 089 Tricks | 090 Dominant strategy equilibrium | 091 Prisoner's dilemma | 092 Nash equilibrium | 093 Risk taking and avoidance | 094 Schelling focus | 095 Public goods | 096 Paradox | 097 Sand heap | 098 Two daughters | 099 Bell's theorem | 100 God
Correct Answer | Logic Basics | Font Collection | Learning Words | Logician Collection | Acknowledgements
001 Inference, premise, conclusion | 002 Truth | 003 True | 004 False | 005 And, or, if | 006 Meaning of “and” | 007 Eliminate false | 008 Insert and | 009 Eliminate and | 010 Lead step by step | 011 Because | 012 Insert or | 013 Eliminate either | 014 Eliminate or | 015 Eliminate if | 016 Eliminate if | 017 Eliminate if | 018 Continuing | 019 Contradictory sentence | 020 Insert false | 021 Insert if | 022 Insert if | 023 Eliminate the afterwords | 024 Connect | 025 Either way 1 | 026 Either way 2 | 027 Sentence logic | 028 The meaning of “either” | 029 Is and sharing and is or sharing | 030 Gathering is false | 031 Follows | 032 Follows each other | 033 Rules for writing differently and leading step by step | 034 Must and sometimes | 035 Reversing the order of if | 036 The meaning of “if” | 037 When only then | 038 Just if and must if | 039 If this or that | 040 Must be | 041 Sufficient and necessary conditions | 042 Counterfactual conditional | 043 Consistent | 044 Unsatisfactory | 045 Format errors | 046 True and proper | 047 Strong | 048 Simple and pervasive sentences | 049 All | 050 Some
| 051 Ben Grimm | 052 Write all several differently | 053 Ben Grimm reasoning 1 | 054 Ben Grimm reasoning 2 | 055 Quantified logic 1 | 056 Quantified logic 2 | 057 Truth game | 058 Lie game | 059 Treasure chest | 060 Line up | 061 Matching | 062 Branching | 063 Scientific reasoning 1 | 064 Scientific reasoning 2 | 065 Probably reasoning | 066 Rough estimate | 067 Because it's similar | 068 Blaming | 069 Inference diagram | 070 Argument diagram | 071 Reinforcement and rebuttal | 072 Borrowing a conclusion | 073 Complaint | 074 Nonsense | 075 Ad hominem attack | 076 Biased evidence | 077 False blame | 078 Unreliable assumption | 079 Confusing words | 080 Trustworthiness | 081 Bayes's axiom | 082 False positive | 083 Simpson's trial | 084 Making up one's mind | 085 Pre-stocking | 086 Quitting smoking | 087 Pascal's Wager | 088 Nuclear armament | 089 Tricks | 090 Dominant strategy equilibrium | 091 Prisoner's dilemma | 092 Nash equilibrium | 093 Risk taking and avoidance | 094 Schelling focus | 095 Public goods | 096 Paradox | 097 Sand heap | 098 Two daughters | 099 Bell's theorem | 100 God
Correct Answer | Logic Basics | Font Collection | Learning Words | Logician Collection | Acknowledgements
Into the book
“Logic is like air in our lives.
As living beings, we exhale, and as interpreters, we must exhale logic.
We cannot excel in science, religion, art, or technology simply by breathing.
Because science is more than breathing, and art is more than breathing.
Likewise, science, religion, art, technology, etc. are beyond logic.
But you can't do science or art without ignoring logic.
Logic is our ideology and the foundation of human empathy.”
--- p.7
“The conclusion of a robust inference is actually true in our world.
But the conclusion actually being true does not make the inference strong.
Furthermore, even if both the premises and the conclusion are actually true, the inference may not be strong.”
--- p.217
“Edward Damer, in his 2012 book Debunking Fallacies: A Practical Guide to Fallacious Arguments, 7th Edition, outlines five conditions for a good argument.
First, the basic framework of the argument must be established.
Second, the premises must be related to the conclusion.
Third, the premises must support the conclusion well.
Fourth, the premises must be acceptable.
Fifth, it must be able to withstand anticipated objections.
An argument is not very good if it fails to meet at least one of these five conditions.
This kind of argument is called a 'fallacy' to put it badly, and 'rhetoric' or 'rhetoric' to put it nicely.
“Here, error does not mean a false belief, but a faulty reasoning or argument.”
--- p.326
“This class really made me feel like my brain was being upgraded.
It's not just that I've improved by downloading one application, it's that my brain has grown, as if I've changed the smartphone OS itself.
“I used to be very timid, but now I think I’ve tuned my brain.”
As living beings, we exhale, and as interpreters, we must exhale logic.
We cannot excel in science, religion, art, or technology simply by breathing.
Because science is more than breathing, and art is more than breathing.
Likewise, science, religion, art, technology, etc. are beyond logic.
But you can't do science or art without ignoring logic.
Logic is our ideology and the foundation of human empathy.”
--- p.7
“The conclusion of a robust inference is actually true in our world.
But the conclusion actually being true does not make the inference strong.
Furthermore, even if both the premises and the conclusion are actually true, the inference may not be strong.”
--- p.217
“Edward Damer, in his 2012 book Debunking Fallacies: A Practical Guide to Fallacious Arguments, 7th Edition, outlines five conditions for a good argument.
First, the basic framework of the argument must be established.
Second, the premises must be related to the conclusion.
Third, the premises must support the conclusion well.
Fourth, the premises must be acceptable.
Fifth, it must be able to withstand anticipated objections.
An argument is not very good if it fails to meet at least one of these five conditions.
This kind of argument is called a 'fallacy' to put it badly, and 'rhetoric' or 'rhetoric' to put it nicely.
“Here, error does not mean a false belief, but a faulty reasoning or argument.”
--- p.326
“This class really made me feel like my brain was being upgraded.
It's not just that I've improved by downloading one application, it's that my brain has grown, as if I've changed the smartphone OS itself.
“I used to be very timid, but now I think I’ve tuned my brain.”
--- p.597
Publisher's Review
If you want to find a way to reduce errors
We need to look back and change the way we think.
Logic is not the domain of scholars who study special disciplines.
As we live our days, speaking, thinking, and acting, we use logic as if we were breathing.
Depending on the logic I use, things may go my way or I may encounter opposition from others.
But logic is like the air that gives us breath; it forms the basis of our words and thoughts, but it does not easily reveal itself.
"Brain Supplement Plan 100" is a great guide that allows us to closely approach the logic that underlies our thinking.
When my thoughts are based on faulty logic, my day gradually becomes filled with errors.
Develop the power to discover, supplement, and revise your logic through the "Brain Supplement Plan 100."
It will become the foundation that truly constitutes my daily life.
At my own pace
Let's study 100 rules of logic.
"Brain Supplement Plan 100" selects 100 topics dealing with logic, and each topic consists of a 2-page explanation and 2 pages of practice problems.
Beginners can read two pages of explanations a day and then solve two pages of practice problems the next day. Those preparing for exams like the PSAT or LEET will benefit from a more rapid pace of study.
For readers who prefer to achieve their goals regularly, the plan to complete this book in 100 days, one topic per day, will be a challenging task.
"Brain Supplement Plan 100" has an intuitive and consistent structure that allows you to study at your own pace.
Using the "Brain Supplement Plan 100" as a guide, I hope you will create your own plan to access the foundation of your thoughts.
I recommend this to these people.
Students who want to build their thinking skills from the ground up
People preparing for critical thinking ability tests such as the PSAT and LEET
People who want to check and adjust their thinking framework
People who need to write logically, such as essays, papers, articles, and columns.
People who seek more precise and accurate knowledge
We need to look back and change the way we think.
Logic is not the domain of scholars who study special disciplines.
As we live our days, speaking, thinking, and acting, we use logic as if we were breathing.
Depending on the logic I use, things may go my way or I may encounter opposition from others.
But logic is like the air that gives us breath; it forms the basis of our words and thoughts, but it does not easily reveal itself.
"Brain Supplement Plan 100" is a great guide that allows us to closely approach the logic that underlies our thinking.
When my thoughts are based on faulty logic, my day gradually becomes filled with errors.
Develop the power to discover, supplement, and revise your logic through the "Brain Supplement Plan 100."
It will become the foundation that truly constitutes my daily life.
At my own pace
Let's study 100 rules of logic.
"Brain Supplement Plan 100" selects 100 topics dealing with logic, and each topic consists of a 2-page explanation and 2 pages of practice problems.
Beginners can read two pages of explanations a day and then solve two pages of practice problems the next day. Those preparing for exams like the PSAT or LEET will benefit from a more rapid pace of study.
For readers who prefer to achieve their goals regularly, the plan to complete this book in 100 days, one topic per day, will be a challenging task.
"Brain Supplement Plan 100" has an intuitive and consistent structure that allows you to study at your own pace.
Using the "Brain Supplement Plan 100" as a guide, I hope you will create your own plan to access the foundation of your thoughts.
I recommend this to these people.
Students who want to build their thinking skills from the ground up
People preparing for critical thinking ability tests such as the PSAT and LEET
People who want to check and adjust their thinking framework
People who need to write logically, such as essays, papers, articles, and columns.
People who seek more precise and accurate knowledge
GOODS SPECIFICS
- Date of issue: July 10, 2024
- Format: Hardcover book binding method guide
- Page count, weight, size: 600 pages | 148*210*35mm
- ISBN13: 9791196389598
- ISBN10: 1196389594
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