The time of payment is decided by the customer. It can only have one value, the one chosen by the customer. For the purposes of the implication, the time-of-payment isn't universally-quantified. It's a constant that has been chosen by the customer. — Michael Ossipoff
Because you're forgetting something important - the interpretation of the customer, which contradicts the clerk's interpretation. Which interpretation is the correct one? Read below. — Harry Hindu
Because you're forgetting something important - the interpretation of the customer, which contradicts the clerk's interpretation. — Harry Hindu
Which interpretation is the correct one?
The time of payment is decided by the customer. It can only have one value, the one chosen by the customer. For the purposes of the implication, the time-of-payment isn't universally-quantified. It's a constant that has been chosen by the customer. — Michael Ossipoff
That's a bit silly. Yes it's chosen by the customer but he can choose any time. — Benkei
I'm not sure what the purpose is of this thread. Is it to show that the truth table for material condition isn't an adequate reflection of how we actually speak? — Benkei
...and when he has done so, by paying, his time of payment becomes a constant. For the purpose of the implication-proposition, the customer's payment-time is a constant. — Michael Ossipoff
In any case, as I said, the sign-wording is the important thing, because the sign, and not the predicate logic wording, is in the story. — Michael Ossipoff
Then I was right when I said that you used an improper logical system in translating the logical meaning of the sign.
The sign's implication-proposition can be expressed in the language of propositional or predicate logic.
Neither is wrong.
My objection to the predicate logic language was only that it seemed an unnecessary complication. If we're having a conversation, and you insist on speaking Latin, that doesn't mean that you're wrong, it just makes it more difficult for me. That was my complaint about predicate logic language.
What I was saying in the passage you quotes was only that the sign itself is the important thing, because that's what my story was about. But if predicate logic language can express the message even more unambiguously, then of course the sign could have been written in that language.
But any of the various ways of saying it are equally proper.
So I certainly didn't and don't mean that predicate logic is improper for translating the sign into logic language.
— Harry Hindu
In "If-THEN" statements, the THEN statement is necessarily dependent upon the truth value of the IF statement.
This is the way it works in the English language and computer programming (and I would add that a computer is more logical than a logician because a computer doesn't have greed clouding it's interpretation of the symbols on the sign).
If the truth value of the implication-proposition is only dependent upon the truth value of the conclusion, then the truth value of the premise is irrelevant to the truth value of the proposition.
If the material conditional only states that q is true when (but not necessarily only when) p is true, and makes no claim that p causes q, then what exactly is the relationship between p and q?
A material conditional is more like simply writing two completely separate statements. Translating to English, it's more like saying,
"Give me $5000."
"I give you the diamond.",
where each part isn't dependent upon each other to be true.
The sign is an IF-THEN statement and that is the logical system that should be used in determining the logical meaning of the sign.
The "truth" table produces invalid results precisely because you're using a logical system that doesn't translate to the actual meaning of the sign.
That makes no difference I'm afraid. If it's random it becomes constant at the time of payment as well. — Benkei
Exactly. If the customer flips a coin to decide when to pay, the time of his payment is still a constant with respect to the implication-proposition. — Michael Ossipoff
Exactly. If the customer flips a coin to decide when to pay, the time of his payment is still a constant with respect to the implication-proposition. — Michael Ossipoff
Exactly. That makes andrewk right. — Benkei
I don't think that's a reasonable paraphrase of the sign. This version refers only to the present, and whether, at the time the reader is reading the sign, they have already given $5000.If you have given me $5,000 then I will give you the diamond. — Michael
Didn't he get a receipt upon payment of the money? The OP does not mention whether he does, but only a fool would pay such an amount without immediately obtaining a receipt.the customer has no proof that he paid for the diamond. — Michael Ossipoff
Presumably which one the clerk intended when he wrote it? Isn't that part of your theory on meaning; the speaker's intention? In this situation, the customer simply misunderstood. — Michael
You're missing the point. The point is that the customer's interpretation of the sign is just as legitimate as the clerk's. The problem is that they both contradict each other, which means that at least one of the interpretations is wrong.They can't both be right at the same time.Because you're forgetting something important - the interpretation of the customer, which contradicts the clerk's interpretation. — Harry Hindu
Of course. That's why clerk's scam worked.
Yes the customer was intentionally deceived. — Michael Ossipoff
Of course he does. The diamond and the sign would attract attention. No other customers or clerks saw the customer give the clerk the money? There aren't cameras in the jewlery store? All these other behaviors you tell us the clerk engages to cover up the fact that the customer gave them the money in is dishonest. The clerk is a liar simply by his behavior.Obviously the clerk's scam would be illegal. But, as I said, the customer has no proof that he paid for the diamond. — Michael Ossipoff
Again you miss the point. It's not about speaking different languages, it's about using the correct terms in ANY langauge to translate to the correct terms of another language. When your logical system ends up being inconsistent with other logical systems, then something is wrong. They should all be integrated into a consistent whole.My objection to the predicate logic language was only that it seemed an unnecessary complication. If we're having a conversation, and you insist on speaking Latin, that doesn't mean that you're wrong, it just makes it more difficult for me. That was my complaint about predicate logic language. — Harry Hindu
You obviously don't know much about computer programming. ALL computer languages mean the same thing with IF-THEN statements....but that could depend on the company that's using the computer. — Michael Ossipoff
No. It only depends on the truth value of the conclusion. Just look at the table.The truth value of the implication-proposition is function of the truth-values of the premise and the conclusion. — Michael Ossipoff
Exactly. Now you've just contradicted your statement above. See how illogical this is?But of course, by the standard implication truth-table, if the conclusion is true, the implication-proposition is true regardless of whether or not the premise is true. — Michael Ossipoff
You just keep moving the goal posts. This conversation is no longer meaningful.But, as a practical matter, in the story, it doesn't matter. The customer can't prove that he paid, and so the scam worked. The clerk (who is also the store owner and a logician) can assure himself that he didn't lie when he scammed the customer, because his truth-table is the standard one. — Michael Ossipoff
The OP never said the clerk wrote the sign. As a matter of fact, the store owner (which isn't a logician) most likely wrote the sign because he is the one that actually owns the diamond. — Harry Hindu
You're missing the point. The point is that the customer's interpretation of the sign is just as legitimate as the clerk's. The problem is that they both contradict each other, which means that at least one of the interpretations is wrong.They can't both be right at the same time. — Harry Hindu
Obviously the clerk's scam would be illegal. But, as I said, the customer has no proof that he paid for the diamond.
Of course he does. The diamond and the sign would attract attention. No other customers or clerks saw the customer give the clerk the money?
There aren't cameras in the jewelry store?
All these other behaviors you tell us the clerk engages to cover up the fact that the customer gave them the money in is dishonest. The clerk is a liar simply by his behavior.
.My objection to the predicate logic language was only that it seemed an unnecessary complication. If we're having a conversation, and you insist on speaking Latin, that doesn't mean that you're wrong, it just makes it more difficult for me. That was my complaint about predicate logic language.
.Again you miss the point.
.It's not about speaking different languages
., it's about using the correct terms in ANY langauge to translate to the correct terms of another language. When your logical system ends up being inconsistent with other logical systems, then something is wrong. They should all be integrated into a consistent whole.
.You keep claiming that the clerk is a logician. If so, then the clerk would know that there other logical interpretations of the sign and that all logical interpretations should be consistent.
....but that could depend on the company that's using the computer.
.You obviously don't know much about computer programming. ALL computer languages mean the same thing with IF-THEN statements.
.The truth value of the implication-proposition is function of the truth-values of the premise and the conclusion.
.No. It only depends on the truth value of the conclusion. Just look at the table.
.But of course, by the standard implication truth-table, if the conclusion is true, the implication-proposition is true regardless of whether or not the premise is true.
.Exactly. Now you've just contradicted your statement above.
.See how illogical this is?
.But, as a practical matter, in the story, it doesn't matter. The customer can't prove that he paid [a problematic claim], and so the scam worked. The clerk (who is also the store owner and a logician) can assure himself that he didn't lie when he scammed the customer, because his truth-table is the standard one.
Admittedly he'd have to lie to the police about whether the payment was made, and admittedly the implication-proposition in his sign was false (a lie) when he refused to give the diamond.
But he didn't lie to the customer when he said that the sign's implication proposition was true before the payment was made.
.You just keep moving the goal posts.
.This conversation is no longer meaningful.
Whether or not the clerk lied isn't what is being argued against. My argument is that he isn't a logician. What I'm saying is that implication-propositions don't translate to logical "IF-THEN" statements that are used by people and computers via their programming. The customer interpreted the sign correctly as a causal relationship between the act of giving the money and the effect of receiving the diamond. If there is no relationship between the premise and the conclusion, then the sign is wrong to be written the way it is.But the clerk didn't lie to the customer when he said the sign's implication-proposition was true, because that statement was correct,when made, by the standard truth-table for 2-valued truth-functional implication. — Michael Ossipoff
My argument is that [the clerk] isn't a logician — Harry Hindu
What I'm saying is that implication-propositions don't translate to logical "IF-THEN" statements that are used by people and computers via their programming. — Harry Hindu
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.