Definify.com
Webster 1913 Edition
Baroko
Ba-ro′ko
,Noun.
[A mnemonic word.]
(Logic)
A form or mode of syllogism of which the first proposition is a universal affirmative, and the other two are particular negatives.
Definition 2024
Baroko
Baroko
See also: baroko
English
Proper noun
Baroko
- (logic, obsolete) A form or mode of syllogism in which the first proposition is a universal affirmative and the other two are particular negative.
- 1847, Augustus De Morgan, Formal logic: or, The Calculus of inference, necessary and probable (page 132)
- The moods Baroko and Bokardo do not admit of reduction to the first figure, by any fair use of the phrase […]
- 1870, William Dexter Wilson, An elementary treatise on logic (page 129)
- But this Conclusion is false, consequently the Minor Premise of the first Syllogism, Baroko, its contradictory, is true.
- 2005, Charles Gray Shaw, Logic in Theory and Practice (page 161)
- The foregoing list of moods in the imperfect Figures II and III does not contain Baroko or Bokardo.
- 1847, Augustus De Morgan, Formal logic: or, The Calculus of inference, necessary and probable (page 132)