Using your analogy. Doesn't the content of the games have an influence over the rules of the games, as in modal logic?
To me, modal logic looks, well, unnecessary. Or, to be sharper, what does modal logic make possible that was not possible before? — tim wood
But this all pushes for a closer look at your original question, "Thus, is there any valence to logical truths or conditions?" — tim wood
In the link you provided, valence seems to be about the words that can be meaningfully connected to verbs (maybe I got that wrong - please correct!). It seems a miss-application, then, to try to apply valence to logical truths or conditions (what, actually, does "conditions" mean in this context?). — tim wood
An example of the problems that arise absent preparatory groundwork is that I think of logic as being contentless, merely manipulations of symbols under arbitrary rules of manipulation. And some manipulations seem useful; some more than others. How does valence work with symbols? And so forth.... — tim wood
mean it's all really confusing to me. If reality can be simulated via logic, then shouldn't all Platonists necessarily be logicians too? — Question
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