99% — khaled
...Davidson’s suggestion of locating a shared background of beliefs would fail miserably in dealing with anything but the most superficial level of thought. — Joshs
The problem I see with this is not the scope so much as the "really".
Take it out and the statement is clearly wrong: "Nothing is 'true', except this statement. — Banno
I think scepticism is given far more prominence than it deserves. A cultural extrusion form fablsificationism, itself an overrated notion. — Banno
To be a law of logic, a principle must hold in complete generality
No principle holds in complete generality
____________________
There are no laws of logic.
— Gillian Russell
There are two ways to deal with this argument.
A logical monist will take the option of rejecting the conclusion, and also the second premise. For them the laws of logic hold with complete generality.
A logical pluralist will reject the conclusion and the first premise. For them laws of logic apply to discreet languages within logic, not to the whole of language. Classical logic, for example, is that part of language in which propositions have only two values, true or false. Other paraconsistent and paracomplete logics might be applied elsewhere.
A few counter-examples of logical principles that might be thought to apply everywhere. — Banno
...Davidson’s suggestion of locating a shared background of beliefs would fail miserably in dealing with anything but the most superficial level of thought.
— Joshs
His interest is in statements of what is the case, and in that regard he limits his discourse, but we can have some fun extending it. One way to proceed while keeping some of his conniving relevant would be to look at direction fo fit, as discussed in Anscombe and Searle and elsewhere. One might characterised Davidson's interest as word-to-world rather than world-to-word. — Banno
But in politics we change the world to fit the word. — Banno
Davidson might be understood as pointing out that we agree on the presence of a board and the pieces; on the squares, and perhaps even on the initial arrangement of the pieces on the board. But suppose someone does not recognise castling. The disagreement here is not as to how the world is, but how the world might be changed. — Banno
One might describe the situation as incommensurable; one player wishes to castle; the other does not recognise this as a legitimate move. This is not a disagreement as to what is the case, but as to what is to be done. — Banno
All logical laws have exceptions (counterexamples) must itself have (an) exception(s). — TheMadFool
I don't see why you would think that.It looks like logical nihilism is going to hinge on the Liar. — frank
But how can logical nihilism be supported by rational inference when it calls the basis of rational inference into question? If there are no unconditional facts to fall back on, is it not just meaningless verbiage? — Wayfarer
On that account "there are no logical laws" is not of the form Γ⊨φ, avoiding the problematic.The reason is this: a natural interpretation of the claim that there is no logic is that the extension of the relation of logical consequence is empty; there is no pairing of premises and conclusion such that the second is a logical consequence of the first. — P.4
Some post modernists might well reject deduction. It takes all sorts to make a world....would some forms of postmodernism amount to logical nihilism? — Tom Storm
It looks like logical nihilism is going to hinge on the Liar.
— frank
I don't see why you would think that. — Banno
Logical monism claim that there are logical laws that hold in absolutely all case. Logical pluralism claims that no law holds in absolutely all cases. Logical nihilism holds that logical laws do not hold in any case. — Banno
That leaves open other forms of ratiocination. If, as they argue, for every given logical law a counterexample can be presented, then one might induce that there are no logical laws. — Banno
You'd love that.It might also indicate that logic has limits — Wayfarer
Why not? "Frank thinks statements of opinion are neither true nor false" seems to be true...Statements of opinion aren't true or false — frank
The Philosophy Now article draws that analogy. I don't think it goes very far, partly for the reasons given above. Perhaps the logical monist says "this is how you ought think", the nihilist says "It doesn't matter what you think", the pluralist, "this is how we show if your thinking is consistent"Does the situation compare to moral nihilism? — frank
Statements of opinion aren't true or false
— frank
Why not? "Frank thinks statements of opinion are neither true nor false" seems to be true... — Banno
Perhaps the logical monist says "this is how you ought think", the nihilist says "It doesn't matter what you think", the pluralist, "this is how we show if your thinking is consistent" — Banno
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