∀p: T("p") → ∃"p" (from 1, by existential introduction) — Michael
2. ∀p: T("p") → ∃"p" (from 1, by existential introduction)
— Michael
Again, this looks problematic. "p" is an individual variable, so ∃"p" is like ∃(a). You would have to move to a free logic and use ∃!"p"; but that something exists cannot be the conclusion of an argument in free logic. You have to assume that p is true and that there is a sentence "p".
This is now spread over two threads. https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/13170/an-analysis-of-truth-and-metaphysics — Banno
But you have "if John is bald then John exists". That's invalid ill-formed. ∃(a) is not a formula in first order logic, unless you move to free logic. — Banno
I'm saying it's not allowed in the rules of classical logic. — Banno
I'm saying it's not allowed in the rules of classical logic. — Banno
Free logic allows such statements to be true despite the non-referring singular term. Indeed, it allows even statements of the form ∼∃x x=t (e.g., “the ether does not exist”) to be true, though in classical logic, which presumes that t refers to an object in the quantificational domain, they are self-contradictory.
what logic am I using when I say that if John is bald then John exists? — Michael
Classical logic is 2.5k years old — Agent Smith
what logic am I using when I say that if John is bald then John exists?
— Michael
"John exists" is not expressed in mere predicate logic. You need modal logic for it. — TonesInDeepFreeze
The logic is not correct. Line 3 (whether original or reviesd) is a non sequitur. — TonesInDeepFreeze
That some x is true semantically entails that some x is a proposition, given that truth is predicated of (and only of) propositions. — Michael
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