From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Logic Made Easy: How to Know When Language Deceives You is a 2004 book by
Deborah J. Bennett published by
W.W. Norton & Company (
ISBN
0-393-05748-8). Its theme is the analysis of what common words such as "some", "all", and "not" mean, and how logic relates to speech and writing. It discusses eliminating problems such as
ambiguity and
imprecise language from
communications, such as in
technical writing.
-
"Review of Logic Made Easy",
Publishers Weekly
- Chylinski, Manya (April 15, 2004), "Review of Logic Made Easy",
Library Journal: 90
-
Devlin, Keith (November–December 2004), "Becoming a better reasoner",
American Scientist, 92 (6): 575–576,
JSTOR
27858495
- Doran, K. (December 2004), "Review of Logic Made Easy",
Choice Reviews: 674
- Epstein, Richard L. (December 2004), "Review of Logic Made Easy",
The Bulletin of Symbolic Logic, 10 (4): 577–578,
doi:
10.1017/S1079898600003668,
JSTOR
3216745
- Wolf, Robert S. (May 2005),
"Review of Logic Made Easy", MAA Reviews,
Mathematical Association of America