"All A is B" is equivalent to "For all x, if x is A then x is B" — aletheist
But we know no animal is magical. — MindForged
But this is really a problem. Answer me: how do you know that a winged horse doesn't exist? Unless you define horse as being something wingless, you can't know if there is a horse with wings. — Nicholas Ferreira
Why woudn't both be universal? Russell says that "No Greek are men" is the same of "All Greek are not-man". For me, it's clear that both propositions "all greeks are man" and "no greek are man (all greeks are not-man)" are universal ones. For it to be a particular one, it would need to use existential quantification and, therefore, assume the subject existence, woudn't? — Nicholas Ferreira
We know that no animal is magical in what context? — Terrapin Station
Sorry, I do not understand this question.For all x, if x is A then x is B by virtue of? — Terrapin Station
I'm not sure I even understand you here. — MindForged
I still do not understand the question. We are discussing formal logic, what true conclusions we can--or rather, cannot--derive from that proposition, assuming that it is true.What makes the claim the case that if x is A then x is B? — Terrapin Station
It's a negative existential one, but any universal proposition can be transformed into an existential one."No Greek is man" is just to say that it is not the case that some Greek exists and is a man. That's an existential quantifier, not a universal one. — MindForged
Correct--we can derive "It is not the case that some A is not B" from "All A is B." However, we still cannot derive "Some A is B" from either of these without the additional premise, "Some A is A." — aletheist
I still do not understand the question. We are discussing formal logic, what true conclusions we can--or rather, cannot--derive from that proposition, assuming that it is true. — aletheist
But logic is used to analyze what actually exists and infer things about them. If I am taller than Terrapin, and Terrapin is taller than aletheist, then I am taller than aletheist. I am (for arguments sake) taller than Terrapin, therefore I am taller than aletheist. That's a valid inference. — MindForged
Whether we are imagining them or not, the issue is whether there are any As at all. The proposition "All A is B," or equivalently "For all x, if x is A then x is B," takes no position on this. It simply states that if there are any As, then all of them are Bs. Hence it is not deductively valid to derive the proposition "Some A is B," or equivalently "There exists an x, such that x is A and x is B," since this entails that there is at least one A--a conclusion that was not included in the premise.Either we're imagining As with property B in a domain, or there possibly are As in a domain, independent of our imagining. — Terrapin Station
Logic is about the relationships of the statements qua statements. It can't tell you what's true of the actual world. It can suggest what's true of the actual world just in case such and such is true, but it can't tell you that such and such is true. You have to look outside of logic for that. Logic is only about relational structure per se, and really only about how we think about that on an abstract level. — Terrapin Station
I am looking outside the logic — MindForged
It can suggest what's true of the actual world just in case such and such is true, but it can't tell you that such and such is true. — Terrapin Station
So with the Darapti argument (All As are Bs; All As are Cs; Therefore some Bs are Cs) we go from true premises to a false conclusion. — MindForged
For example, if B is "orange" and C is "bouncy" (and As are bouncy orange balls) it doesn't make sense to say that some orange is bouncy. — Terrapin Station
In the winged horse example, we're not positing properties where it doesn't make conceptual sense to say that one property somehow is or has the other property. — Terrapin Station
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