Banno
Opinion polls taken just before the1980 election showed the Republican Ronald Reagan decisively ahead of the Democrat Jimmy Carter, with the other Republican in the race, John Anderson, a distant third. Those apprised of the poll results believed, with good reason:
[1] If a Republican wins the election, then if it's not Reagan who wins it will be Anderson.
[2] A Republican will win the election. Yet they did not have reason to believe
[3] If it's not Reagan who wins, it will be Anderson
Michael
How? — Banno
[1] If a Republican wins the election, then if it's not Reagan who wins it will be Anderson.
Banno
Michael
bongo fury
Yet — Banno
Moliere
Cuthbert
Amalac
Sure.
But (1) is true. — Banno
Amalac
It's just a case of the so called “paradoxes of material implication”. — Amalac
sime
TonesInDeepFreeze
fdrake
[1] If a Republican wins the election, then if it's not Reagan who wins it will be Anderson.
[2]A Republican will win the election.
If it's not Reagan who wins, it will be Anderson
then if it's not Reagan who wins it will be Anderson.
TonesInDeepFreeze
TonesInDeepFreeze
Keep track of domains. — fdrake
fdrake
The propositions don't involve quantifiers. There's no issue of domains. — TonesInDeepFreeze
TonesInDeepFreeze
Premise 2 is false — Amalac
Amalac
At a point before the election, with 'win's understood as 'will win', then R v A is true.
At a point after the election, with 'wins' understood as 'won', then R v A is true. — TonesInDeepFreeze
TonesInDeepFreeze
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