Daily Archives: May 19, 2016

English Lesson 124: Tom Sawyer

In this part of the book, Tom Sawyer does several things. In chapter 9, he goes off with Huck to heal the warts that he has, by going to the grave with a dead cat and performing some ritual. But

Posted in English, Tom Sawyer

Mathematics Lesson 136: Modus Ponens

Modus ponens is a method of affirming the consequent. Modus ponens can be shown through these 3 propositions: If (it’s raining), then (the sky must be cloudy). It’s raining. .*. The sky is cloudy. I created a compound implication sentence.

Posted in Internet Math, Math, Mathematical Logic

Science Lesson 106: The Brain

The first part of the brain that we’re going to cover is the brain stem. The brain stem is that root-like object underneath the brain that connects the cerebral hemisphere, the part of the brain that we usually think of

Posted in Anatomy, Science

Mathematics Lesson 140: Review

In this post, I’ll cover everything that I talked about starting from lesson 136-139. In lesson 136, I covered the modus ponens, a way of figuring out a conclusion to a logical argument. Modus ponens affirms the antecedent in an

Posted in Internet Math, Math, Mathematical Logic

History Lesson 125: Review

Elizabeth I was the last monarch of the Tudor dynasty, the dynasty that was formed after the War of the Roses between the two factions of Yorkists and Lancastrians. She was knowns as the virgin queen because she never married

Posted in Catholic Reformation, History, Kings and Queens of England

English Lesson 127: Tom Sawyer

In chapter 21, summer vacation was approaching, and the school master: Mr. Dobbins, was becoming even more unfair and tyrannical. In fact, the only pupils that managed to not get any beatings were the older girls and boys. The boys

Posted in English, Tom Sawyer

Science Lesson 108: Spinal Cord

The spinal cord is a cord that extends on the inside of the disks, which turns into the medulla oblongata. In adults, the spinal cord extends to the invertible disk. The spinal cord terminates at disks L1 and L2, and

Posted in Anatomy, Science

Mathematics Lesson 139: Disjunctive Syllogism

Disjunctive syllogism is the rule that we use when we have a disjunction in a logical argument. If we want to write out a sentence and use disjunctive syllogism, it’ll look like this: “This is either chocolate cake or vanilla

Posted in Internet Math, Math, Mathematical Logic
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