Take this argument:
1. if P, then Q
2. P
3. therefore Q — Bartricks
You can't have true premises and a false conclusion. — emancipate
There you go. Turns out you can. — Isaac
... if you don't care about maintaining logical validity. — emancipate
didn't say it was necessarily true, did I? — Bartricks
... formal (i.e. logic, mathematics), not fictional.Necessity, I think, isa fiction. — Bartricks
Agreed; 'necessary facts' are impossible.There is no necessity in the world.
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