True premises and a valid argument guarantee a true conclusion. An argument which is valid and has true premises is said to be sound (adjective) or have the property of soundness (noun).
So in order to be true, your argument need to be valid. — Harry Hindu
Which is in line with what Baden said. — Christoffer
Except that it isn't.
Roses are red.
Violets are Blue.
Therefore Baden is right.
Invalid argument, true conclusion. (true premises as well.) — unenlightened
Fallacies are so basic as to be entirely philosophically uninteresting. If one is arguing over fallacies, one has ceased to engage in anything worthy of sustained discussion. — StreetlightX
To be sound (which means true) an argument... — Janus
the argument would not be true... — Janus
Then what are you actually saying with an argument, if not making the case for the fact of some state-of-affairs?Arguments can't be true. — Baden
So something could be philosophically interesting, even if it were riddled with fallacies? :confused: — Janus
It wasn't a matter of either one of us being right or wrong. We were simply talking past each other. But you can believe whatever makes you sleep better tonight.And I don't care that you got it wrong. It doesn't matter. Again>>The point. — Baden
Seriously, someone should sticky a topic on logic terminology. — Michael
The analytics are sometimes just that; too anal with their terminology, too desperate to be rid of ambiguity. — Janus
If the fallacies were deliberately woven into the text I suppose it could be something interesting; a kind of novelty; but could it be philosophically interesting? — Janus
I voted 'agree' to the OP, because despite protestations that it would take up precious space; I can't see how it could take up more precious space than the reams of drivel that make up much of what is posted on this forum. — Janus
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