I understand that counterfactual reasoning is faulty is the sense that a TRUE consequent can’t follow from a FALSE antecedent.
e.g. If I was lizard then I would like flies
Nothing that can be said to be true could follow from “If I was a lizard” since it is not the case that I am a Lizard.
How can this be reconciled with counterfactuals propositions that take a tautological form in which case they must always be true.
e.g. If I was taller than you then I would be taller than you.
Is the above statement false because of its counterfactual nature or true because of its tautological nature? Or Is it neither?
How about a less purely tautological but still intuitively true statement like
If I was taller than you, then you would be shorter than I. — Nonsense
I don't believe the examples you present to be a counterfactual cases. A counterfactual as I understand it is a statement with a FALSE antecedent and TRUE consequent. I might be missing something... As I understand it what you have presented are examples of logical induction.
I would also say that counterfactual thinking would never work in maths, in so far as the thinking was useful. I'm not sure about that either... This is all very new to me, so I could have it all wrong. — Nonsense
A counterfactual as I understand it is a statement with a FALSE antecedent and TRUE consequent. — Nonsense
I think you are conflating two different senses of counterfactual: — SophistiCat
You are reasoning in the conditional subjunctive (although not writing in it).... — Frank Apisa
I read your comment and am tempted to answer, but I think you are best of asking someone else. Lest I lead you further astray haha — Nonsense
Why not send the man lost and thirsty in the desert towards a mirage. — TheMadFool
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.