There may indeed be many things beyond logic, or for which logical analysis is unsuitable. — Wayfarer
Of course [one] is correct. — Wayfarer
Have you considered what would come of things, if we were to reject identity, the 1st law?
onto/logical: x = x
propositional: p ⇔ p
You may consider it a working presumption, if you like, which enables all kinds of things, including our talk. — jorndoe
Therefore, could logic be that relation/connection, that path, between the 'something' and the truth? — BrianW
Logic is about language only, and not about the world itself. — ChatteringMonkey
What then justifies the validity of the path? — TheMadFool
That’s pretty right, but it’s also more than that. Logic would be impossible without abstraction and generalisation, which in turn are constituents of language itself [as well as arithmetic]. And then it turns out that logic can be used to discover, or disclose, things about the world that we wouldn’t otherwise know, which actually is a remarkable thing, that is often taken for granted. — Wayfarer
Logic is about language only, and not about the world itself. — ChatteringMonkey
If this were true, then deductive arguments would have no application in empirical science.
However, deductive arguments do apply to empirical science.
Therefore this is not true. — Wayfarer
Buridan's ass was prey to indecisiveness that - hypothetically - caused it to starve.I feel like Buridan's ass right now.
Please help — TheMadFool
It seems to me you're getting along just fine. — andrewk
The answer my philosophy prof. gave to the question of "justifying" logic was that it worked "because it had better" work. And I think there's something to this. I hear in it the acknowledgement that the search for some - any - ultimate ground is futile and ultimately naive and un-mature, that the most one gets is efficacy. — tim wood
Logic’s justification can be grounded in its ability to find truths. Basically, if logic gets to truths then that’s a justification of its principles and ergo itself. — TheMadFool
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