The first two premises are about a conception; they're a priori claims about how you're using terms. They're not about the external world. — Terrapin Station
The problem is the premises are true. Are you seriously denying that all winged horses are horses or that they have wings? — MindForged
Otherwise you're flat out wrong because no winged horses actually exist. — MindForged
The article I quoted does support me because the real world is a model in which the argument is proven to not be truth preserving. It goes from true premises to a false conclusion. The idea that the actual world doesn't count is absurd. We use logic to come to true conclusions about the actual world all the time. — MindForged
Read it again. "Therefore some horses have wings" uses existential quantification, that's what "some" is translated as in formal logic. I'm quoting myself correctly. There's no argument here, the argument is considered invalid by logicians for exactly this reason. It does not preserve truth in all models. — MindForged
The wording is only ambiguous if you don't interpret the logical terms as they standardly are done. "All" is universal quantifying, "some" is existential quantifying. — MindForged
You cannot validly move from quantifying over a set to saying the set has members who satisfy the conditions to be part of the set. — MindForged
That has to be an extra premise otherwise it commits the existential fallacy. Unless I'm much mistaken, this is the exact argument Russell gives to show why modern logic does not admit this as a valid form. — MindForged
Right; and in modern deductive logic, the conclusion "Some B is C" does not follow from the premises "All A is B" and "All A is C," since a universal proposition does not entail that the categories corresponding to its terms each have at least one member. An additional premise is required--"Some A is A." In Aristotelian deductive logic, that additional premise is effectively stipulated from the outset by the rule that "All A is B" is only true if "Some A is A" is also true.The truth-maker for a conclusion is whether the conclusion follows from the premises. — Terrapin Station
More perspicuously, the conclusion "There exists an x, such that x is B and x is C" does not follow from the premises "For any x, if x is A then x is B" and "For any x, if x is A then x is C," since a hypothetical/conditional proposition does not entail the existence of anything in the universe of discourse. An additional premise is required--"There exists an x, such that x is A." — aletheist
That only contradicts the conclusion if the conclusion implies that winged horses actually exist. But that alleged implication is exactly what I'm calling into question. It certainly isn't explicit anywhere in the argument, as worded. It's your interpretation. Is your interpretation the only possible interpretation? No. It doesn't take a genius to think of other ways of interpreting the conclusion, as it is worded, which do not necessarily imply actual existence. — S
Only, it seems, if you equivocate between the premises to the conclusion. Like Terrapin said, you switch domains partway through the argument. You interpret the premises to be about an abstraction and about categories or sets, yet you interpret the conclusion to be about actual flying horses existing in the real world. It seems to me that it's your interpretation that's the problem, not the argument itself. You aren't interpreting it charitably. — S
I told you that there is no "There is" contained in the wording of the argument, and that's true. I also said that you're reading that into the argument, which is also true. You can't fault me here. — S
That you can show me systems of logic where "some" is interpreted as an existential quantifier doesn't address the issue. Does it have to be interpreted in that way? If so, why? Is that the best or most charitable way to interpret the argument? If so, why? — S
Then my queries would be regarding what's standardly done. Do you see that this is just kicking the can down the road? — S
Why not? My understanding is that you say that this causes problems if you go by an interpretation that necessitates actual existence. But could it not be that the problem is with this interpretation? — S
Much of contemporary ontology builds on the assumption that existence is to be understood in terms of quantification: in a slogan, to exist is to be something. Ontology is largely concerned with the domain of the existential quantifier. This assumption can be traced back to the work of Frege and Russell, both of whom analyzed quantification in terms of predication, and plays a crucial role in Quine’s admonition to transform ontology into the study of the ontological commitments of our global theory of the world regimented in the language of quantificational logic and identity.
It is possible that Russell is wrong, unthinkable as that might seem, yes? Maybe we could avoid the fallacy altogether with a different interpretation. Is Russell's the only interpretation? Are there no competing interpretations? — S
Right; and in modern deductive logic, the conclusion "Some B is C" does not follow from the premises "All A is B" and "All A is C," since a universal proposition does not entail that the categories corresponding to its terms each have at least one member. An additional premise is required--"Some A is A." In Aristotelian deductive logic, that additional premise is effectively stipulated from the outset by the rule that "All A is B" is only true if "Some A is A" is also true. — aletheist
But what if the conclusion in the horsey argument isn't about existence? — S
In both modern and Aristotelian logic, every particular proposition (such as "Some B is C") is about existence in the universe of discourse. In Aristotelian logic, every universal proposition is also about existence in the universe of discourse, since "All A is B" is only true if "Some A is A" is true. The universe of discourse is usually understood to be the actual world, but a different one can be stipulated.I don't see a problem with that unless you bring existence into it. — S
In both modern and Aristotelian logic, every particular proposition (such as "Some B is C") is about existence in the universe of discourse. In Aristotelian logic, every universal proposition is also about existence in the universe of discourse, since "All A is B" is only true if "Some A is A" is true. The universe of discourse is usually understood to be the actual world, but a different one can be stipulated.
Returning to the example, "Some horses have wings" is true only if the universe of discourse is a fictional world that includes winged horses. The additional premise, "Some winged horses exist," serves the purpose of stipulating just such a universe of discourse. — aletheist
Because empty terms show this argument form to fail and thus Aristotle was wrong to deem it a valid argument, hence Classical Logic was right to distance itself from Aristotle's logic. Following from Russell, take this argument:
All winged horses are horses,
All winged horses have wings,
Therefore some horses have wings.
Clearly the first two premises are true but the conclusion is clearly false, we know there are no horses with wings. So this ought not be regarded as a valid argument in the logical systems developed after Aristotle. — MindForged
MindForged seems to have gotten himself into if we simply think of the conclusion as relating to a possible or fictional world where it's true that some horses have wings? I mean, isn't that more charitable than assuming that an argument about winged horses is about the real world? — S
If one doesn't stipulate what domain of discourse one is speaking in (or if the argument doesn't make it obvious) then the assumption is that they're presenting a model of the real world. Like if I say "If Clinton had won the election, then x, y, z" I'm clearly talking about counterfactuals that might have happened. But since horses exist, one has to be careful how they shift about the terms they're talking about because it can lead to this problem. — MindForged
I was probably a bit abrasive. I'm just not a good communicator probably. I'll leave it to aletheist, lol. — MindForged
If I say "Some apples are delicious" everyone is going to agree I'm talking about actually existing apples and that there is at least one apple that is delicious because otherwise the assertion would be rendered false. — MindForged
Unless you explicitly say you're speaking about some type of fictional scenario, no otherwise the statement is clearly false. It's understood as saying "There exists at least one unicorn and it is black". I didn't say it couldn't be understood but that it couldn't be rendered true under how we understand terms like "some" to work in normal contexts. — MindForged
I think that that's covered by the first quote in the comment above yours. I would charitably assume that you were talking about a fictional or hypothetical or conceptual domain. — S
Hold up, you previously made the point that if the language doesn't make it obvious that it's not the real world which is the domain of discourse, then you shouldn't assume that it is. What does the term, "unicorn", suggest to you? Does he really need to explicitly say that he's talking about fiction? — S
But isn't that an empirical statement? What evidence/authority are you referring to when you say "It's understood as saying "There exists at least one unicorn and it is black""? I'm older than I care to remember and in my life experience people tend to guess the context from the language game. Unless you've got a longer life experience than me (unlikely, I'm ridiculously old), or some large sample evidence, I don't really see how you're in a position to say how an expression is 'normally' understood. — Isaac
I believe "There exists" is usually pretty unambiguous. — MindForged
It is normally parsed that way in formal logic, both modern and Aristotelian, which is the universe of discourse for this thread. In fact, the OP explicitly stipulated modern formal logic as explicated by Bertrand Russell.You said that "some x is y" is normally parsed as "there exists some x that is y". I'm saying that's an empirical claim. — Isaac
Maybe a real world example is needed so the fiction thing isn't a hang-up. — MindForged
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