The cow is, of course, a cow. And her name might be Daisy or Buttercup...or maybe Ermintrude.
The Aristolean logic bit is (how we say) trite - of course a cow is a bovine as that is just semantics. Which much though I love it is the most pointless of philosophical memes.
The logic tutor is a bit of fun, I'm also learning the boring way, from a book! It's nice to have two sources and two different ways of learning and I think I'm questioning enough not to take any single source as gospel. I agree circular statements can be useful but I'd like to know something is circular - I think I do mostly but there's room to improve.
The Ven diagram stuff is the part I find the hardest, even if I draw out the diagrams I still struggle. I don't struggle too much with 'real world' classification systems it's the abstract ones used to teach that get me in a knot.
When I was teaching autistic children years ago I thought the 'same vs different' programmes and categories were really core stuff. I even mused that maybe intelligence is built on discrimination and grouping together. My foray into formal logic makes me wonder if I was on the money with my musings.
Nice point, it is even worse than that:
cow1 [kou] Show IPA
–noun, plural cows, (Archaic) kine.
1. the mature female of a bovine animal, esp. of the genus Bos.
2. the female of various other large animals, as the elephant or whale.
3. Informal. a domestic bovine of either sex and any age.
4. Slang: Disparaging and Offensive. a large, obese, and slovenly woman.
5. Offensive. a woman who has a large number of children or is frequently pregnant.
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