If you are asking if I think that there is any logic that doesn't presuppose that there is such a thing as true and false, then no. — Harry Hindu
I thought we were supposed to be talking about the topic at hand?That's right Harry, I forgot, there's no conflict of opinion in politics is there? — unenlightened
I thought we were supposed to be talking about the topic at hand? — Harry Hindu
Sure it does. It basically mandates that the opposite of true is false. It is the root of all philosophical conclusions. If you keep asking, "why?", it basically comes down to, "because it is.", and something cannot be something that it isn't.LNC doesn't give you a logic by itself. It says very little about valid inferences; or plausibility of claims; or evidentiary status; it just tells you not to believe something and its negation at the same time. This is nowhere near enough. — fdrake
I thought we were supposed to be talking about the topic at hand? — Harry Hindu
Yeah, but not on the topic at hand, because you decided to engage in ad hominem political attacks rather than defend your statements on the topic at hand.Oh. I'm glad we agree. — unenlightened
I find it very strange that you don't see your own presuppositions of truth in every sentence that you make - that every statement you make is about how things are - from what dialectical logic is to what your thoughts are.If we are talking about interpretation one, we could basically stick "I think" in front of everything that everybody says, and it will always be true. But why would we ignore the external referents of propositions in this way? — Pantagruel
Yeah, but not on the topic at hand, because you decided to engage in ad hominem political attacks rather than defend your statements on the topic at hand. — Harry Hindu
I find it very strange that you don't see your own presuppositions of truth in every sentence that you make - that every statement you make is about how things are - from what dialectical logic is to what your thoughts are. — Harry Hindu
If A mans his post in the face of an attack, then A is brave.
But A can man his post for a while, but abandon it when the fighting becomes too fierce.
So A is both brave and not-brave. — Pantagruel
Sorry, are you saying we shouldn't be discussing how to resolve conflicts of opinion or that we should be? I take the latter view - do you agree?
Note. I am here following my own stricture of trying to establish some common ground. — unenlightened
Well sure, empiricism is just as necessary as rationality, if that is what you mean. If not, then I would encourage you to give examples of where logic/empiricism, alone is inadequate. We can make claims all day, but if you aren't willing to provide examples that can falsify my statements, then it seems that we are at an impasse.The rules of correct inference(logic) cannot tell us whether or not some statement or other is true. If the aim is to determine which of two competing statements is true, then logic is of no help here. It can, however, be used to establish whether or not a statement has been arrived at by virtue of following those rules, if we know the particular kind of logic being used. Logic can help us to determine if statements are reasoned.
Typically, logical statements are held to be better(more reliable) than those that are not arrived at via logical means, however, a statement/opinion can be both valid(a logical statement/conclusion that follows the rules of correct inference) and false.
Logic alone is utterly inadequate for the task at hand. — creativesoul
Huh? :brow:That's because I am capable of dialectical reasoning.
If A mans his post in the face of an attack, then A is brave.
But A can man his post for a while, but abandon it when the fighting becomes too fierce.
So A is both brave and not-brave. — Pantagruel
There are never scenarios where the true/false (binary) state is inadequate. To say that there is, is to deny the law of non contradiction, but to deny the law of non contradiction actually makes use of it, so you end up defeating your own argument.I guess the whole point is that there are scenarios where the true/false (binary) state is inadequate. Even in physics, particles can be in more that one state simultaneously, it's what makes quantum computing possible. So it seems that there are empirical conditions in which the true/false dyad breaks down. Nature, it seems, never learned boolean logic.
So in terms of the OP, can we achieve a mutual understanding such that both your notion, that logic is foundational, and my notion that logic transcends the boolean form, co-exist? — Pantagruel
What you do is different than what you say, so what am I suppose to believe? — Harry Hindu
So, it seems to me that you think dialectic logic is the solution to everything — Harry Hindu
Well sure, empiricism is just as necessary as rationality, if that is what you mean. If not, then I would encourage you to give examples of where logic/empiricism, alone is inadequate. — Harry Hindu
I'd like to reprise common sense for a moment, and suggest that it is common, not in the sense of there being no shortage, but in the sense of it being shared. Meaning is shared, senses are shared, and this is the bedrock on which all communication is founded. Our discussion cannot begin without this commonality. — unenlightened
But you aren't merely pointing out that it exists. You attempted to show an example of it's use and failed miserably. In pointed out that it exists, you are pointing out a truth, and even provided (what you thought) is the nature of it's existence.Not at all. I am merely pointing out that it exists, in contrast with your claim that everything reduces to true and false. Cheers. — Pantagruel
Like I said to Pantagruel. If our opinions are conflicting, then how do you know that our opinions are of the same thing?The question is whether or not there is some universally applicable reliable method for determining which opinion is true when we find ourselves being presented with conflicting opinions about the same things. — creativesoul
If you're asking if you can apply logic to ethical questions, then no. There is no such thing as an objective morality. When it is right to open an economy is when individuals feel safe in going out in public, and that can vary from individual to individual. So it seems to me that you are attempting to answer an unanswerable question, or attempting to answer a subjective question as if it had an objective answer.You stated "logic". I answered that logic alone is inadequate for determining which conflicting opinion is true.
Now you're invoking a philosophical position called "empiricism" and adding it to logic alone, as if to say logic and empiricism are enough - when used in conjunction with one another - to tell which conflicting opinion is true. I'm still objecting to that for it's not true. Logic and empiricism are inadequate. They are not capable of being used as a means to discriminate between true and false claims.
So, in effect you're changing your answer, and/or moving the goalposts. I could object on those grounds, but that would look like a hollow victory, and I'm not interested in winning. I am interested in shedding some much needed light upon an everyday problem.
If speaker A says "We should re-open the economy" and speaker B says "We should not re-open the economy" we have ourselves a real life everyday example to discuss.
So...
Tell me how logic alone can discriminate between which of these two statements is true, if either is and exactly how logic determines that much.
I'll tell you how it cannot, even when - especially when - accompanied by empiricism. — creativesoul
You attempted to show an example of it's use and failed miserably — Harry Hindu
No, that isnt the case. What is the case is that you see the world in black and white and you often confuse your black for white and vice versa.Or else you simply failed to grasp it because it doesn't fit in your procrustean perspective.. — Pantagruel
Seems to support what I said, not what you said. Bravery comes in degrees, not on or off / true or false. Some are braver than others. Tell me, Pantagruel, what room does the word "braver" have in your example? You seem to say that the word would be meaningless if you were to apply dialectic logic to bravery. So it seems that either you have the wrong idea about dialectic logic or the wrong idea about bravery, and how and when to apply dialectic logic (it doesn't seem to work for bravery), and it is reflected by your examplethey do not restrict the number of truth values to only two: they allow for a larger set W of truth degrees. — Pantagruel
Seems to support what I said, not what you said. Bravery comes in degrees, not on or off / true or false. Some are braver than others. Tell me, Pantagruel, what room does the word "braver" have in your example? You seem to say that the word would be meaningless if you were to apply dialectic logic to bravery. So it seems that either you have the wrong idea about dialectic logic, and how and when to use it, and it reflects in your example. — Harry Hindu
:lol: What did you attempt to illustrate if not the conclusive nature of dialectic logic? Or are you saying that your illustration is just scribbles and isn't about anything?Au contraire. It was a perfectly valid choice of a dialectical problem. Itwas never intended to be conclusive, only illustrative (as I have repeatedly pointed out, yet you inexplicably refuse to acknowledge). — Pantagruel
Which supports what I said here:"Dialectical thinking refers to the ability to view issues from multiple perspectives and to arrive at the most economical and reasonable reconciliation of seemingly contradictory information" — Pantagruel
This is akin to what I have said before in that we can have different views of the same thing, but we have to be careful that we aren't confusing our views with what our views are of. In discussing opposing views, we are discussing our views, not what our view is of. To get at what our views are of, we have to find similarities between our views, not differences between our views.
The fact that our views may differ says nothing about what our views are about, but more about ourselves - the viewers. — Harry Hindu
This doesn't fit with what you just quoted. You and I have opposing views, that have yet to be reasonably reconciled. So we haven't yet engaged in any dialectic logic because you don't want to reasonably reconcile our opposing views. You just want to go off-topic and say that I don't understand, or that I'm not grasping it, as if dialectic logic has this nature that I'm not grasping and that my view of it is false, not some degree of truth of it. You keep contradicting yourself with every post.Certainly your counter-argument was applicable, and amplified the issue. In doing so, you thereby participated in the process of dialectical reasoning, and gave a strong argument yourself for the use of many-valued (versus dyadic) logic. — Pantagruel
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