Does this scenario make sense? — frank
Well, since the truth of a proposition does not depend on the number of people believing it, I'm not sure how such a situation would undermine logic. In fact, my guess is that the community would be quite dysfunctional, and not get along as well as a community that did adhere to logic. — LD Saunders
Logic is a way that we think about things. — Terrapin Station
Their logic textbooks were accidently misprinted and now they're all wrong about what's logical and what's not. — frank
But then why do we teach students to detect illogical arguments? — frank
While the foundations are shared, intelligence is finite. In complicated cases, it's not always easy to parse the complexity. And then in a real world context there are usually emotions involved. To some degree teaching logic seems related to teaching adulthood. Think before you leap. Look carefully so to avoid the kind of thinking that will lead to disaster. — macrosoft
So if everyone could arrive at the same level of emotional maturity, we would all automatically have the ability to distinguish the logical from the illogical? — frank
How would you explain the innateness of logic? — frank
Giving an account of why logic is innate would be structured by logic. Is that a problem? — frank
I'm thinking of an account that says logic is divine, and so bound to lead to right answers. What's the alternative, I wonder. — frank
It might be if one insisted on the impossible project of working without presuppositions or history. I'm glad to no longer feel that itch. — macrosoft
An answer may lurk in exploring the meaning of 'right answers.' Do we perhaps mean that the answer simply accords with our logic? Then logic is bound to lead to the right answers, since right answers are those we are led to by logic. (Of course this is circular, because I guess logic is the/a word that tries to get at exactly what we can't get 'behind' in our thinking. Logic is what it is, like God.) — macrosoft
No longer? What changed? — frank
I think logic can lead to the wrong answer: GIGO. But if logic is part of our make-up because it provides a survival advantage, then our theories may also seem right to us because believing them provides a survival advantage, not because they're true. — frank
But then why do we teach students to detect illogical arguments? — frank
Is logic part of the concept of world coherence? — frank
I notice that no one believes logic is not innate. But explore that anyway; what if it's basically community norms? — frank
If their logic is totally wrong, it's simply useless. You cannot use it in solving practical problems or anything. It cannot be used as it's intended. It basically becomes just scripture that you have to memorize that doesn't make sense. Sure, the teacher can read it out loud and they can try to fathom about what the hell is logic about, but likely it will just remain something utterly useless and difficult, which just has to be memorized to pass the test on the subject and be forgotten later. Likely the subject is just a lot more difficult and a lot more hated than 'logical' logic.Does this scenario make sense? If it does, then what does that imply about logic? If it doesn't, how did you arrive at that conclusion?
This is sort of ripped off from Haugeland's essay Truth and Rule-Following. — frank
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