"If the Baltic sea is salty, then the Eiffel Tower stands." According to material implication this is a perfectly good statement, but according to English it is foolish. There is nothing which surpasses this sort of statement according to material implication: the antecedent is true, the consequent is true, and therefore the implication is true. What more could we ask? But for the natural speaker what is lacking is a relation between the two things. What is lacking is a relation between the saltiness of the Baltic Sea and the standing-ness of the Eiffel Tower. — Leontiskos
"First-order claims and second-order rules of discourse." — Leontiskos
Take a look at these examples from Russell. ϑ ⊧ ϑ and ϑ & ϒ ⊧ ϑ might seem to be candidates for logical laws one might expect to have complete generality.
Identity: ϑ therefore ϑ;: a statement implies itself. But consider "this is the first time I have used this sentence in this paragraph, therefore this is the first time I have used this sentence in this paragraph"
Elimination: ϑ and ϒ implies ϑ; But consider "ϑ is true only if it is part of a conjunction". — Banno
At the end of the day the English sense of implication simply isn't truth functional. It is counterfactual in a way that material implication is not. — Leontiskos
metabasis eis allo genos — Leontiskos
In English, on the other hand, we only say, "If P then Q," when we believe that the presence of P indicates the presence of Q. The English has to do with a relation between P and Q that transcends their discrete truth values. One way to see this is to note that an English speaker will be chastised if they use the phrase to represent a correlation that is neither causative nor indicative, but in the logic of material implication there is nothing at all wrong with this. — Leontiskos
"Every instance in which A is true is an instance in which B is true"
equivalent with:
"There is no instance in which A is true and B is false."
If A is false in an instance, then that is an instance in which it is not the case that A is true and B is false. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Negation is not at issue. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Which is better and why? — I like sushi
I don't think that "It is not the case that" is usually ambiguous. — TonesInDeepFreeze
"If A then B" is understood differently by different people in different contexts.
So any ambiguity in "It is not the case that if A then B" stems from "If A then B".
So specify what you mean by "If A then B", then you will have specified what you mean by "It is not the case that if A then B". — TonesInDeepFreeze
(1) "If A then B" if and only if "Every instance in which A is true is an instance in which B is true".(material conditional) — TonesInDeepFreeze
Saying A→B is "if A then B" does not provide a solution to the matter of unambiguously converting A→B to English."If A then B" is understood differently by different people in different contexts. — TonesInDeepFreeze
First, that is not idiomatic — TonesInDeepFreeze
Your thoughts? — I like sushi
The resulting language is full of issues, collectively known as the foundational crisis in mathematics, which is clearly also a foundational crisis in logic. — Tarskian
history amply shows, imo, that 'religion' is required only (or at least mostly) for herding sheep — 180 Proof
When we speak to another we have certain expectations concerning the response, which will never be precisely fulfilled. — Joshs
Likewise when we think to ourselves we are communicating with an other, since the self returns to itself slightly differently moment to moment. — Joshs
We always end up meaning something slightly other than what we intended to mean. — Joshs
Here is the incongruence:I don't get it, but I'm confident I could get it using natural English. Is there a substantial difference? — javi2541997
if ¬(A→B) is true and B is false, A is true. If we read it as such, we would have it "If A does not imply B, and B is false, A is true". Surely that can't be the case, otherwise obviously false sentences such as "An equation being quadratic does not imply it has real solutions, the equation does not have real solutions, therefore it is quadratic." would follow. So we can't read ¬(A→B) as "A does not imply B". — Lionino
A -> B is false in a given interpretation if and only if (A is true in the interpretation and B is false in the interpretation).
A |= B is true if and only if every interpretation in which A is true is an interpretation in which B is true.
A |- B iff and only if there is a derivation of B from A.
Example:
"If Grant was a Union general, then Grant was under Lincoln." True in the world of Civil War facts. But false in some other worlds in which Grant was a Union general but, for example, Lincoln was not president.
"Grant was a Union general" entails "Grant was under Lincoln". Not true, since there are worlds in which Grant was a Union general but, for example, Lincoln was not the president.
"Grant was a Union general" proves "Grant was under Lincoln". Not true, since there are not other premises along with "Grant was a Union general" to prove "Grant was under Lincoln". — TonesInDeepFreeze
In classic symbolic logic, a -> b is true, according to its truth table, if, for example, a is true and b is true.
(2+2=4) implies (Kamala Harris is a presidential nominee). These is true in classical logic. But it doesn't really match our intuition at all. — flannel jesus
If you are asking what is the most accurate English translation of the intended meanings in ordinary symbolic logic, just put in:
"it is not the case that" where '~" occurs
"if ____ then ____" where '____ -> ____' occurs
"and" where '&' occurs
"or" where 'v' occurs — TonesInDeepFreeze
[1] There are instances in which A is true but B is false.
[2] It is not the case that A entails B (same as above).
[3] It is not the case that A implies B (where 'implies' means the material conditional).
[4] It is not the case that A implies B (where 'implies' means a connective other than the material conditional). — TonesInDeepFreeze
'rain without wetness', 'wetness', 'rain' are not sentences. — TonesInDeepFreeze
One is never sure which of two characteristics is more prominent in the American national character and therefore of the greater significance: naivete or a superiority complex. When for example they say things about our region, our surprise at their ignorance is surpassed only by annoyance at their stupid insolence. The less they know about a matter, the more confidently they speak. They really believe that Europeans are eagerly waiting to hear from them and heed their advice.
[...]
They cannot believe that there are cultural values that are the result of centuries of historical development, which cannot simply be bought. It was no bad joke when, after the war, they bought the ruins of German castles and moved them stone by stone to the USA. They really thought that they had purchased a piece of national history embodied in stone, and were naive enough to think that mocking laughter from Europe was respect for the wealth that enabled them to buy what their own tradition and culture lacked.
We would not say anything if the USA were aware of its intellectual and moral defects and was trying to grow up.
Are the guy that lost his mind and started punching himself in the head in their car on tik tok when Biden announced this? — AmadeusD
The conclusion still always follows with p=1 and must in a way be "contained" in what one starts with. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Everything contained in the conclusion must be contained in the premise; we learn nothing from deduction. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Hence, deduction is informative because it involves communication. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Perhaps mathematics is better thought of in terms of signs and relations instead of identity. — Count Timothy von Icarus
It perhaps depends on how much you embrace pancomputationalism in physics and information theoretic explanations of the other special sciences. If we think number only appears in nature in terms of computation and process then that seems suggestive at the very least. — Count Timothy von Icarus
His argument is that intuitionist assumptions — Count Timothy von Icarus
"Thinking" is a very flexible concept. — Ludwig V
Yep. Even if you add the irrelevant and contradictory P2, which is going to make everything true anyway. — bongo fury
Rain without wetness
Wetness
Therefore rain. — bongo fury
No, not because they are in the desert. Because they don't need to give out handouts in order to expand. — Tarskian
And where are they going to grow the food, if they keep expanding? — Tarskian
No, no, there is definitely some logic to the madness over there. People like it a lot. They really like the zero-tax strategy, especially when they have a lot of money. — Tarskian
Most people don't like that shit (pun intended). — Tarskian
We'll see. Nayib Bukele is trying the same thing in El Salvador. — Tarskian
[...] and then at a later phase, claim to have been conversant with the wider philosophical tradition all along / rediscover the wider philosophical tradition, but still subordinate that tradition to goofy analyticisms and still somehow retain the decontextualized feel of early analytic philosophy.
[...]
It just means that analytic philosophy is less special than it thinks it is. — Ludwig V
every new philosophical approach thinks that — Ludwig V
The global poor want to move there because they can get handouts, i .e. free housing, free healthcare, free education, welfare benefits, and so on. — Tarskian
Dubai can keep expanding. — Tarskian
Leiden or Bologna? I don't think so. — Tarskian
When they land a good job in Dubai, they are "da man" back home. Everyone admires them, because"They did it!"
What you call "slave labor" is very prestigious in places like Bangladesh. — Tarskian
Thus for ~(p -> q) I'd say, "It is not the case that p implies q." — tim wood
Or second, relying on the equivalence of (p -> q) <=> (~p v q), I'd say, "Either it is not the case that p, or (it is the case that) q." — tim wood
In any case, going back and forth between "logical formulas" and natural language" is always going to be problematic. — tim wood
To be fair, if ¬(A→B) is true and A is false, anything is true. — bongo fury
¬(A→B) means A without B. — bongo fury
Trump will not debate her. She would shred him. Go Kamala. — creativesoul