eodnhoj7
BrianW
Metaphysician Undercover
Taking it an authoritative statement is a fallacy according to the standard laws of logic. — eodnhoj7
eodnhoj7
Metaphysician Undercover
Metaphysician Undercover
eodnhoj7
Metaphysician Undercover
eodnhoj7
Queen Cleopatra
eodnhoj7
eodnhoj7
Metaphysician Undercover
What I am arguing is that the standard laws, as directed through eachother lead to contradiction. P=P requires -P=-P to exist if P cannot equal -P. So -P exists through P=P and inherently defines it. — eodnhoj7
Metaphysician Undercover
eodnhoj7
Metaphysician Undercover
P=P requires P cannot equal -P considering "equal" and "not equal" are not defined except through there relations. — eodnhoj7
Considering "=" is defined in accords to (P,P) equality effectively is defined as "(=)P(=)" where it exists if and only of there is P. — eodnhoj7
eodnhoj7
Queen Cleopatra
eodnhoj7
Metaphysician Undercover
Actually the law of identity leading to the law of non contradiction, and vice versa observes them as connected and required to defined eachother. — eodnhoj7
They collaborate, and Brian agrees to this fact of "collaboration" if you look at the above posts. — eodnhoj7
The three laws of logic, as are commonly known, are corollaries of each other:
1. The Law of Identity.
2. The Law of Non-contradiction.
3. The Law of Excluded Middle.
By corollary is meant, each law naturally inferences the other. — BrianW
eodnhoj7
Metaphysician Undercover
My point is made. — eodnhoj7
eodnhoj7
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