The disjunction AvB is either an "is" statement or an "ought" statement. — Nicholas Ferreira
A := some "is" statement;
B := some "ought" statement;
The disjunction AvB is either an "is" statement or an "ought" statement. — Nicholas Ferreira
If (AvB) is an "is" statement, then consider this:
1. (AvB) ["is" statement]
2. ¬A ["is" statement]
2. ∴ B (1,2, disjunctive syllogism) ["ought" statement] — Nicholas Ferreira
Furthermore, if we can't make this derivation because they are from separate domains, different "kingdoms" of statements, then we couldn't derive "is" statements from "ought" statements too. But this argument shows that we actually can:
1. John ought to go to school
2. Kids and only kids ought to go to school
3. Therefore, John is a kid.
Is this wrong? — Nicholas Ferreira
If (AvB) is an "is" statement, then consider this:
1. (AvB) ["is" statement]
2. ¬A ["is" statement]
2. ∴ B (1,2, disjunctive syllogism) ["ought" statement] — Nicholas Ferreira
Else, if (AvB) is an "ought" statement, then consider this:
1. A ["is" statement]
2. AvB (1, add.) ["ought" statement] — Nicholas Ferreira
Furthermore, if we can't make this derivation because they are from separate domains, different "kingdoms" of statements, then we couldn't derive "is" statements from "ought" statements too. But this argument shows that we actually can:
1. John ought to go to school
2. Kids and only kids ought to go to school
3. Therefore, John is a kid.
Is this wrong? — Nicholas Ferreira
Asserting the disjunction itself would be to assert an "is" statement. It says that it is true that either A is true or B is true. And unless both A and B are false, then the statement is true. — S
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/hume-moral/#ioHume famously closes the section of the Treatise that argues against moral rationalism by observing that other systems of moral philosophy, proceeding in the ordinary way of reasoning, at some point make an unremarked transition from premises whose parts are linked only by “is” to conclusions whose parts are linked by “ought” (expressing a new relation) — a deduction that seems to Hume “altogether inconceivable” (T3.1.1.27). Attention to this transition would “subvert all the vulgar systems of morality, and let us see, that the distinction of vice and virtue is not founded merely on the relations of objects, nor is perceiv’d by reason” (ibid.).
1. (AvB) ["is" statement]
2. ¬A ["is" statement]
3. ∴ B (1,2, disjunctive syllogism) ["ought" statement] — Nicholas Ferreira
he disjunction AvB is either an "is" statement or an "ought" statement. — Nicholas Ferreira
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