Apodictic

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Apodictic (Ancient Greek: αποδεικτικος, "capable of demonstration"), a logical term, applied to judgments which are necessarily true, as of mathematical conclusions. The term in Aristotelian logic is opposed to dialectic, as scientific proof to probable reasoning. Kant contrasts apodictical with problematic and assertorical.

The term "apodictic" is also sometimes applied to a style of argumentation, in which a person presents their reasoning as categorically true, even if it is not necessarily so. An example usage might be: "Don't be so apodictic! You haven't considered several facets of the question."

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