Reply
Sat 12 Dec, 2015 09:20 pm
(a) If an argument is deductively valid, then there are no counter-examples to it.
(b) If an argument’s main conclusion is false, then the argument is deductively invalid.
(c) If an argument’s main conclusion is true, then the argument is deductively valid.
(d) If an argument is deductively valid, then all of its premises are true.