Either p is true OR p is false [principle of bivalence] — TheMadFool
Didn't you read my question? — SolarWind
Is it possible for things to be both true and false at the same time or neither true or false at the same time? Or must things be either true or false at any given time? — TiredThinker
A proposition being both true and false is a contradiction. I gave the example of how if x is a cat, it's impossible that x is not a cat (x is cat is true and x is a cat is false). — TheMadFool
Is it possible for things to be both true and false at the same time or neither true or false at the same time? Or must things be either true or false at any given time? — TiredThinker
This is also the old Reductive versus Holistic refrain. If you look at particular things or events, each can be evaluated as Good or Bad, in the specified context : relative to me, to you, to everybody. But if you look at everything-in-general, the values are not so Black & White.Is it possible for things to be both true and false at the same time or neither true or false at the same time? Or must things be either true or false at any given time? — TiredThinker
This is my old refrain. Most things that get people, at least philosophers, excited are neither true nor false. Examples:
Free will vs. determinism
The nature of reality
The nature of truth — T Clark
So, the job of Philosophy (Wisdom) is to evaluate in terms of relative values : more-or-less Good or Bad ; True or False ; Real or Ideal. The Middle Path, the Way of Tao. — Gnomon
The belief of the existence of evil, at all, is what allows for the infinite manifestations of evil that we experience daily.
— PseudoB
Or as Lao Tzu wrote:
Recognize beauty and ugliness is born.
Recognize good and evil is born.
Is and Isn't produce each other. Hard depends on easy, Long is tested by short,
High is determined by low, Sound is harmonized by voice, After is followed by before.
Tao Te Ching, Verse 2. Addiss and Lombardo translation. — T Clark
A proposition being both true and false is a contradiction. I gave the example of how if x is a cat, it's impossible that x is not a cat (x is cat is true and x is a cat is false).
— TheMadFool
What if you talk about the evolutionary ancestors of cats? One researcher says that's already a cat, another says that's not a cat yet. — SolarWind
Here also:So a claim can never be true or not true at the same time because it is a judgment based on facts at that specific moment. — Nickolasgaspar
Not a true contradiction - a definitional issue at best, confusion at worst. — TheMadFool
or neither true or false at the same time? — TiredThinker
1. Item number 2 is trueIf x is a cat, it can't be not a cat. [law of noncontradiction, law of the exclused middle, XOR].
For any proposition p,
Either p is true OR p is false [principle of bivalence] — TheMadFool
1. Item number 2 is true
2. The number of true statements in this list is not 3.
3. Puppies are evil co-conspirators with aliens from Haley's comet secretly scheming to steal your precious bodily fluids.
3 cannot be false; because if it is, 2 can neither be true nor false, and 1 be neither true nor false. That violates the principle of bivalence. Therefore, beware the puppies. — InPitzotl
What is the use of insisting on binary logic if I cannot apply it in many cases? In politics there are many questions where binary logic is of no use. — SolarWind
That's not a great example. Let's say person A does indeed say:Person A may say "Trump is an asshole" but can not say "Trump is a nice guy" at the same time because that would be a contradiction within the framework. — Hermeticus
All you can say is essentially, Person A contradicted himself, if he was in a framework where that's a contradiction. — InPitzotl
Yes. That's why theoretical Philosophy, as contrasted with empirical Science, has not made much measurable progress over the centuries.Most of the difficult issues we discuss in philosophy are metaphysical issues - they relate to the underlying assumptions we bring to the discussion. Metaphysical issues; like free will vs. determinism and the nature of reality, do not have true or false answers. They have no truth value. They are merely more or less useful for dealing with particular issues. — T Clark
Yes. That's why theoretical Philosophy, as contrasted with empirical Science, has not made much measurable progress over the centuries...We still debate some of the same questions that Plato addressed in his writings. — Gnomon
Those topics are still "difficult" and mysterious, but with our modern understanding of how reality works on a fundamental level, we can look at those ancient topics from new perspectives. — Gnomon
People are angry.
Trusting people is a problem.
Are those binarily True or False?
Look before you leap is a good heuristic.
He who hesitates is lost is a good heuristic.
Are those simply true or false?
Viruses are not life forms.
True or false? — Bylaw
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