Can anyone give me an example of an argument that we know is deductively valid and has correct premises but do not have knowledge of the structure of? Is there a sub-branch of philosophy that deals with such things? I can't find anything on it anywhere. — ToothyMaw
What if it applied conversely and allowed us to determine that the proof behind a principle or theorem assumed to be true couldn't be observed or determined? — ToothyMaw
a sub-branch of philosophy — ToothyMaw
we know the premises, but don't know the format of the argument — ToothyMaw
Virtually any mathematical conjecture would be of this type. When I compose a possible theorem I'm not certain about the argument I will ultimately use, although I am almost sure it is correct - but not absolutely. This is true of most mathematicians. Fermat's Last Theorem was assumed true long before the proof was established. But no one was absolutely certain. — jgill
Jean-Baptiste Biot, who assisted Laplace in revising it for the press, says that Laplace himself was frequently unable to recover the details in the chain of reasoning, and, if satisfied that the conclusions were correct, he was content to insert the constantly recurring formula, "Il est aisé à voir que ... " ("It is easy to see that ..."). — Wikipedia
Formally, an argument is merely an ordered pair <G P> where G is a set of statements and P is a statement. G is the set of premises and P is the conclusion.
An argument is valid if and only if there is no model in which every member of G is true but P is false. So 'validity of an argument' is a semantical notion. — TonesInDeepFreeze
added steps — ToothyMaw
an argument, A, whose premises include the entire set of the correct premises of sound argument B — ToothyMaw
and has the same conclusion as B — ToothyMaw
but the conclusion is unsound for A — ToothyMaw
because of added steps or premises — ToothyMaw
Doesn't that give a model in which every member of G could be true but the conclusion, P, be false? — ToothyMaw
recursive step in a valid model — ToothyMaw
an instance in which correct premises are applied to correct premises — ToothyMaw
in such a way that the conclusion P of argument G becomes false even though all the premises stay true? — ToothyMaw
Would that not be a model that would defy the formal definition? — ToothyMaw
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