A statement - as far as I know! - cannot be invalid and sound though. — I like sushi
This talk about contradictions in the premises of an argument ensuring validity is complete nonsense. — fdrake
You're giving misinformation here. You're favoring a relevance logic interpretation, which is fine (I favor that, too), but that's a far more recent interpretation. The traditional interpretation is that validity can (also, in addition to a relevance interpretation) obtain when either it's impossible that the premises are true OR when it's impossible that the conclusion is false. — Terrapin Station
A deductive argument is said to be valid if and only if it takes a form that makes it impossible for the premises to be true and the conclusion nevertheless to be false. Otherwise, a deductive argument is said to be invalid.
A deductive argument is sound if and only if it is both valid, and all of its premises are actually true. Otherwise, a deductive argument is unsound.
Unrestricted explosion is not a feature of relevance logics. — fdrake
It's as if you didn't read or couldn't comprehend what I wrote. You are giving misinformation if you're saying that under traditional (NOT relevance-logic) validity, contradictory premises do not produce a valid argument. — Terrapin Station
Probably because you're using the wrong keyword, "non-validity". Google "invalid reasoning", and that should help.I haven't had much luck using google. — Josh Alfred
Just to be clear. — fdrake
It's very simple. Contradictory premises are sufficient for a valid argument (in non-relevance logics) due to the definition of validity. — Terrapin Station
To anyone reading this, please to not listen to Terrapin, and instead look at this excellent account from a citable resource. — fdrake
If you don't agree with it, I can give you a bunch of citations from academic phil sources for it. I can explain it to you, too, if you need me to explain it to you. — Terrapin Station
A valid argument is an argument that preserves truth. To say that an argument is valid, therefore, is to say that it is impossible for its premises to be true while its conclusion is false. To say that an argument is invalid is to say that it is possible for its premises to be true while its conclusion is false. But if an argument has inconsistent premises, then, by definition (of “inconsistent”), it is impossible for
its premises to be true. Therefore, if an argument has inconsistent premises, it is impossible for its
remises to be true while its conclusion is false. This is the definition of “valid argument.” It follows that any argument with inconsistent premises is valid.
That makes more sense. A valid argument means 'true premises implies true conclusion', which means 'not true premises or true conclusion', contradictions are never true, so the implication always holds when the premises are contradictory, so the argument is valid. Sub in a tautology into the conclusion part of the disjunction defining validity and it is valid too. — fdrake
That's what I said at the start though. Validity obtains when it's impossible for premises to be true and(/or--I add or for reasons I detailed in my first post) (It's impossible for) the conclusion to be false. — Terrapin Station
Cool. I hadn't noticed any changes. The important thing is that we get the right info to anyone trying to understand this stuff. — Terrapin Station
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