You mention assumptions and I suppose this could be the key to this, I have a horrible feeling that we must make assumptions about the nature of justification itself before we can apply it to anything, and that makes it seem feasible that we can make assumptions about the nature of reasoning and thereby develop a system of logic. Perhaps assumptions like, that we can know justification as a concept exists automatically without it itself requiring justification. This then makes me wonder if logic also doesn't require justification, though it also makes me wonder how I can, or whether I need to, justify those assumptions. — hymyíŕeyr
So the question is, how could we establish justification for the existence of logic and perhaps some of its core elements, such as the concept of truth values? — hymyíŕeyr
These components would include things like, the idea that you have statements which can have the truth values 'true' or 'false',.... — hymyíŕeyr
I think the question is a misunderstanding. The rules for justification don't need to be justified, no more than the rules for chess need to be justified. They're simply the rules that make the game of epistemology work. — Sam26
As far as a justification is concerned, the deductive argument provides its own justification. If there is no way that the conclusion can be false if the premises are true, then what else would be needed to justify the argument? — LD Saunders
Yes, I think that's the right idea. However we structure our beliefs, ultimately the whole thing hangs free, so to speak: inevitably, some beliefs will not be grounded in any other beliefs, or else the structure of justification will have to be cyclical. So, taking the first option, if perforce some beliefs have to be ungrounded, why not logic? (Here I mean not mathematical logic(s) but the logic(s) that we routinely employ in reasoning.) — SophistiCat
So, we will always have to assume that we are on solid enough ground by accepting any particular starting point. — LD Saunders
So logic is like maths in that they are habits of thought that not only work, but seem to be the only habits that could have worked and so were waiting to be found in some objective sense. — apokrisis
Statements about the world cannot be reduced to simply true or false. — Londoner
Seems we've only tried logic, although I suppose we do have other variants of the usual logic that people have proposed such as paraconsistent logic, relevance logic etc. — hymyíŕeyr
An answer I can already hear would be something like, we observe logic being applied every day and it works, therefore we can conclude that it exists. the question I would pose to this sort of argument would be that, in the process of determining whether the application of logic to real life occurrences has been successful, aren't we already using logic here, and therefore using logic to justify logic? — hymyíŕeyr
Kant argued that the structures of logic which organize, interpret and abstract observations were built into the human mind and were true and valid a priori. John Stuart Mill, on the contrary, said that we believe them to be true because we have enough individual instances of their truth to generalize: in his words, "From instances we have observed, we feel warranted in concluding that what we found true in those instances holds in all similar ones, past, present and future, however numerous they may be" Although the psychological or epistemological specifics given by Mill through which we build our logical apparatus may not be completely warranted, his explanation still nonetheless manages to demonstrate that there is no way around Kant's a priori logic. To recount Mill's original idea with an empiricist twist: "Indeed, the very principles of logical deduction are true because we observe that using them leads to true conclusions"- which is itself an a priori presupposition.
Statements about the world cannot be reduced to simply true or false.
— Londoner
Is it not a true statement that you have replied to my original post? — hymyíŕeyr
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