But everything depends on definitions. You wrote it yourself with Sorite's paradox. What is the use of insisting on binary logic if I cannot apply it in many cases? In politics there are many questions where binary logic is of no use. Is the pay of a particular worker fair? Yes or no? — SolarWind
Do not fault binary logic for the errors in our conceptual schema. You mentioned fairness as regards pay. Be precise as to what you mean by fairness and it's all good, bivalent logic is perfectly apt. — TheMadFool
You need an additional assumption to decide the question. — SolarWind
So? — TheMadFool
Does the tidal flat belong to the land or to the sea? — SolarWind
Define "tidal flat".
The tidal flats have water at high tide and land at low tide. — SolarWind
Can you also give me a statement that brings out the fuzziness in the term "tidal flat"? — TheMadFool
Another example: Does the tidal flat belong to the land or to the sea? I think fuzzy logic is appropriate here. — SolarWind
I do not understand the question. Obviously, there is sometimes water and sometimes land. So I can't say it's either sea or land — SolarWind
The definition of tidal flat is "essentially horizontal and commonly muddy or marshy land that is covered and uncovered by the rise and fall of tides"
There is no fuzziness here. Tidal flat is land. — Hermeticus
You can also call it "Wadden Sea". — SolarWind
One very good example of a fuzzy/vague concept is tallness/shortness. However, once we fix a particular height as a cut-off point, the vagueness/fuziness disappears. — TheMadFool
One very good example of a fuzzy/vague concept is tallness/shortness. However, once we fix a particular height as a cut-off point, the vagueness/fuziness disappears.
Two things to consider:
1. Adapt logic to our conceptual schema: Vagueness is part of our language. Develop fuzzy logic.
2. Adapt our conceptual schema to binary logic: Use precising definitions. Keep binary logic. — TheMadFool
Is it possible for things to be both true and false at the same time or neither true or false at the same time? Or must things be either true or false at any given time? — TiredThinker
Another example: Does the tidal flat belong to the land or to the sea? I think fuzzy logic is appropriate here. — SolarWind
Good point.Do Brussels sprouts taste good? True or false? — SolarWind
First of all, I believe you should specify what "things" you are talking about. Because "apples" are "things" and "true" or "false" cannot be applied to them! Therefore, I have to assume that you mean "statements" (or something similar).Is it possible for things to be both true and false at the same time or neither true or false at the same time? Or must things be either true or false at any given time? — TiredThinker
Right. This statement applies to a fact as I myself indicated. But @TiredThinker has not cleeared this up. He referred to "things" in general. Which is a mistake.If x is a cat, it can't be not a cat. — TheMadFool
Interesting. Can you give a practical example of that?If it's not paradoxical it's not true — Yohan
What is the "apparent" thing in your example-question? That there's a fork on the road? What if there's a cross on the road and you have to select from among three roads? Where would the contradiction be? Yet, the problem is very similar in both cases ...An apparent thing must be one thing or the other. Do I turn left or right to get to this specific destination? — Yohan
Good point. I assume you mean that these are "thigns" and "true" or "false" cannot be applied to them. Right, @TiredThinker made a mistake in not specifying what kind "things" he is talking about. Most probably he meant "statements" ...My coffee is neither true nor false. The word "hello" is neither true nor false. — Michael
Good point. I assume you mean that these are "thigns" and "true" or "false" cannot be applied to them. Right, TiredThinker made a mistake in not specifying what kind "things" he is talking about. Most probably he meant "statements" ... — Alkis Piskas
Well, a statement is a definite or clear expression of something. And this is too general. So a complete sentence that expresses something may qualify. Anyway, this is besides the point, since the topic means about "things", which is even more general!What counts as a statement? Clearly not just any sentence — Michael
I don't think so. I think I was more trying to be inspiring than offering solid logic. I am more an artist than a philosopher. Maybe I should confine myself to the Lounge.Interesting. Can you give a practical example of that?
(I read about contradictions in your description but could not actually find any paradoxicality ...) — Alkis Piskas
My lawyer tells me I shouldn't answer this question.What is the "apparent" thing in your example-question? That there's a fork on the road? What if there's a cross on the road and you have to select from among three roads? Where would the contradiction be? Yet, the problem is very similar in both cases ... — Alkis Piskas
From what I have read here so far I am assuming the statements that aren't well defined are maybe the problem more than whether or not it is strictly true or false? — TiredThinker
What if all statements are made by and evaluated by the same person so different vantage points don't become an issue? — TiredThinker
Perhaps not. That depends on who's pointing. And some modern philosophers have developed a case of Physics Envy, on the assumption that Philosophy is supposed to make some kind of progress. But then, Postmodern philosophers have gone to the opposite extreme, and denied that there is any objective True/False --- it's all political. But traditionally, philosophers have at least hoped to get "closer to truth". In which case, 80% truth value may be close enough for practical purposes. :cool:I don't think that making progress is the point. — T Clark
I wouldn't blame the mystery on philosophers. They merely accepted the challenge of explaining why some of us feel free to choose, even in the face of scientific evidence that the world is strictly determined by initial conditions and natural laws. In fact, Freewill is not a physical problem, it's a moral quandary, And flakey philosophers fee free to foray where angels fear to tread. :gasp:Free will vs. determinism was never difficult and mysterious. Philosophers made it so. — T Clark
Ha, ha! Nice! :grin:I think I was more trying to be inspiring than offering solid logic. I am more an artist than a philosopher. Maybe I should confine myself to the Lounge. — Yohan
:grin: ... This place desperately needs this kind of stuff!!What is the "apparent" thing in your example-question?
— Alkis Piskas
My lawyer tells me I shouldn't answer this question. — Yohan
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