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Reasoning enhances the logical thinking skills. It determines one’s aptitude which is why many competitive examinations ask questions from it. Be it, banking, SSC, railway, IAS/PCS, or any other government recruitment exams, candidates have to score better in Reasoning Test which is a hard nut to crack for many. How to Crack Test of Reasoning is a perfect study resource to learn the problem solving skills of reasoning to make a proper preparation for the competitive examinations. It has been revised carefully according to the latest examination pattern and is divided into key chapters of Verbal Reasoning, Analytical Reasoning, and Non-Verbal Reasoning. It facilitates a complete coverage of the theory followed by exercises graded into base level and expert level for self-evaluation. Each chapter covers the latest exam questions. Also, it carries more than 2500 objective questions as a whole to boost the preparation level. Written in an easy to read manner and incorporated with complete study material, it is an amazing book to climb the ladder of success in your forthcoming competitive exams. TOC Verbal Reasoning, Analytical Reasoning, Non-Verbal Reasoning
For competitive examinations like : IBPS-CWE Bank PO/Clerical/Specialist officers, RRB Officers; SBI-PO/Clerical; NABARD & IDBI Bank Executive Officers -- SSC-CGL (Tier I and II); SSC-CHSL (10+2); SSC-FCI Grade III; SSC-COP/ SI/ASI, Income Tax etc -- LIC/GIC/UIICO AAOs, etc -- UPSC-CSAT, SCRA etc; and other State Service Exams -- Railways Grade 'D' & other technical & non-technical exams -- MAT; CMAT; CET (MBA); SNAP; BBA; BBM; & other B School Admission Tests NTSE; CLAT; Hotel Management etc.
Reasoning is equally weighed section in any competitive examination. Reasoning tests the thinking power and mind applicability skills of the candidates. The questions on reasoning asked in various competitive examinations are not easy to solve without having enough practice. The revised edition of A New Approach to Reasoning will help candidates master the ‘Tricks of the Trade’ as it covers all the three types of reasoning very much comprehensively. This book has been divided into 3 Sections – Verbal Reasoning, Analytical Reasoning and Non-Verbal Reasoning each sub-divided into number of chapters with different types of questions of multiple patterns asked in various exams. The Verbal Reasoning section covers Analogy, Clocks, Calendar, Puzzles, Coding-Decoding, Classification, Number Series, Letter Series, Blood Relations, Clerical Aptitude, etc. whereas, the Analytical Reasoning section covers Statement & Arguments, Statement & Assumptions, Course of Action, Cause & Effects, Syllogism, etc. The Non-Verbal Reasoning section covers Analogy, Classification, Completion of Figures, Cubes, Paper Folding, Mirror Image, Water Image, Figure Matrix, etc. Two Leveled Exercises have been given for practice. More than 2000 Previous Years’ Questions of different competitive examinations including MAT and other MBA entrances, Bank PO, Clerk, SSC, LIC, RBI, RRB, B.Ed. etc along with their authentic and detailed solutions have been covered in the exercises. The ample number of previous years’ questions will help the candidates get an insight into the trends and types of questions asked in the test of reasoning in various competitive and recruitment examinations.
An Invitation to Formal Reasoning introduces the discipline of formal logic by means of a powerful new system formulated by Fred Sommers. This system, term logic, is different in a number of ways from the standard system employed in modern logic; most striking is its greater simplicity and naturalness. Based on a radically different theory of logical syntax than the one Frege used when initiating modern mathematical logic in the 19th Century, term logic borrows insights from Aristotle's syllogistic, Scholastic logicians, Leibniz, and the 19th century British algebraists. Term logic takes its syntax directly from natural language, construing statements as combinations of pairs of terms, where complex terms are taken to have the same syntax as statements. Whereas standard logic requires extensive 'translation' from natural language to symbolic language, term logic requires only 'transcription' into the symbolic language. Its naturalness is the result of its ability to stay close to the forms of sentences usually found in every day discourse. Written by the founders of the term logic approach, An Invitation to Formal Reasoning is a unique introduction and exploration of this new system, offering numerous exercises and examples throughout the text. Summarising the standard system of mathematical logic to set term logic in context, and showing how the two systems compare, this book presents an alternative approach to standard modern logic for those studying formal logic, philosophy of language or computer theory. Fred Sommers is Professor Emeritus, Brandeis University, USA; George Englebretsen is Professor of Philosophy, Bishop's University, Canada.