Bartricks
If A is B and B is C, then A is necessarily C. — Zelebg
3017amen
I think proposition A is true. Proposition A says "there is at least one true proposition". I think that's true, not false! — Bartricks
Bartricks
Okay, do you realize you just agreed to a necessary truth? By agreeing that there exists at least one true proposition, that is considered a necessary truth. — 3017amen
Bartricks
Don't overthink it. — 3017amen
Zelebg
No, I think "if A is B and B is C, then A is C".
3017amen
Bartricks
I realize you prefer ad hominem when pushed in a corner, but that's ok. (Unfortunately, many people resort to that behavior as a deflection mechanism when denying facts.) It's a cognitive science thing too expansive to unpack here. — 3017amen
Maybe, 'contingent truth' will be easier for you to grasp. — 3017amen
First answer this question: — 3017amen
1. all events must have a cause
Is that proposition true or false? — 3017amen
Wittgenstein
3017amen
I think all events do have causes. I don't think they have to. But I think they all do. — Bartricks
3017amen
Bartricks
Wittgenstein
Wittgenstein
Bartricks
If you are saying that you think all events have 'cause-s', you are saying that it is both a necessary and contingent truth. ( At first you said 'False', so I'm just trying to understand you.) — 3017amen
Bartricks
By necessary truth, do you mean proposition that are true by definition. For example "All bachelors are unmarried " is true by definition. It is necessarily true. — Wittgenstein
3017amen
Bartricks
What do you take the word neccessary to mean ? — Wittgenstein
Wittgenstein
But if l say a certain proposition is sometimes true , l also say that it is sometimes false. But if l say a proposition is always true, then it is never false. The word neccessary, always adds clarity to what we are stating. It is a good distinction.necessarily true' is really no different to saying it is TRUE!!
Bartricks
3017amen
3017amen
Why? I don't see that at all. — Bartricks
khaled
But the vast bulk would accept that some truths are necessary and those that are not necessary are contingent. — Bartricks
I think no truth is necessarily true, but at the same time I do not think that it is true that a true proposition 'could be false'. — Bartricks
Wittgenstein
Wittgenstein
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.