Consistency follows from soundness. Proving soundness is not deep. We ordinarily just do induction on the length of derivations.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Some simplified detail might be fun. — Banno
You can stipulate that your account applies to one way of using a word or a phrase, though there may be others — Srap Tasmaner
Quine's Methods of Logic — Srap Tasmaner
A forum on philosophy ought have threads on the basics of logic. — Banno
I liked the word "informal" in your previous post, it's just that propositional calculus is a formal system. It's a branch of mathematics.
If you want to raise the logical literacy of the forum, perhaps it would be better to aim at that dialect called "philosophical English," a dialect spoken by people familiar with formal systems. The traditional early chapters of a logic textbook try to show how the logical constants capture some of what we mean by familiar idioms. — Srap Tasmaner
Seems ↪Srap Tasmaner is correct that we cannot have a less formal discussion of propositional calculus. It's either too rich for some or too poor for others. I think that a shame.
I've no intention of writing another logic text that will satisfy TonesInDeepFreeze. End of tread, I suppose. — Banno
I chose Logic Primer by Colin Allen and Michael Hand for the reason that I taught from it for over a decade at the University of York. One of the interesting things about teaching logic at a university is that no logic teacher at a university is happy with anyone else’s textbook. This is why there are so many logic textbooks: everyone gets hyper-frustrated with the text they’re teaching and ends up writing their own. Now, I’m quite lazy, and I didn’t. I stuck to this book, though actually I changed it in lots of ways. When I teach with it, I reorder it, I delete sections, I add in new sections and new definitions of terms, so in practice the students are learning from my annotated version of the text.
But this is why so many logic textbooks are written. The solution to that problem has arisen in our Web 2.0. I’ll mention it for reference, namely that there is now a logic textbook which is open-source and freely editable, called forallx. It’s online, and more and more logic teachers are saying ‘I’ll take that, and I can edit it in any way I like and use it.’ Anyone can freely access not only the original version of the text, but also any of its modifications. So there’s a Cambridge version of this textbook, a York version, a Calgary version, a SUNY version, a UBC version and probably many more I don’t know about. But the underlying formal language and system is the same in all of those. — The 5 Best Books on Logic
[ ... ] The next book is Mark Sainsbury’s Paradoxes. I love this book. Whole university courses are taught around this book. It’s an absolute classic.
I've since realized that's an inadequate description for the category. It's also, perhaps primarily, for problems in logic itself. — Jamal
And it is true that ordinarily English speakers don't have the material conditional in mind. — TonesInDeepFreeze
A statement being an utterance which expresses a complete idea (not necessarily declarative, possibly interrogative, imperative, etc). — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Material implication in classical and intuitionistic logic is a static relationship that holds between sets , as in "Smoking events might cause Cancer events", where the condition always exists ,even after the consequent is arrived at, due to the fact it is talking about timeless sets rather than time contingent states of processes. — sime
Grice defended material implication as a faithful representation of conditional reasoning in natural languages — Srap Tasmaner
I was only offering a possible distinction between statements and propositions. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
introducing terms without providing a definition or conveying their meaning — Cartesian trigger-puppets
It seems necessary to be in agreement on all terms before arguing one way or another on an issue. Otherwise, how would you know whether or not you agree without a doxastic view of it? — Cartesian trigger-puppets
therefore cannot grant any statements made by moral realists if they introduce normative terms on a stance-independent construal. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
So what context do you have in mind regarding definitions? — TonesInDeepFreeze
I know what 'doxastic' means, but I don't know what you mean by "a doxastic view of it" in that context. — TonesInDeepFreeze
know what 'moral realism' and 'normative' mean, and maybe I have a bit of a sense of what 'stance-independence' means, but I don't know what is meant by 'introduce normative terms on a stance-independent construal'. — TonesInDeepFreeze
“the heart is functioning properly” is to say “the heart is functioning in accordance with medical standards”. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
I actually don’t think definitions need be a requisite, though they are useful insofar as they capture the standard meaning of a term. I try to avoid committing to a definition since it requires a semantic thesis or a theory of public meaning. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
[emphasis added]Like, introducing terms without providing a definition or conveying their meaning. I believe when terms are introduced without clear meaning they form a roadblock preventing the conversation to progress. I can’t grant an argument if a premise contains a term that I don’t understand. I can’t even grant that the statement is propositional. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
What is more, most of the time no effort is made to define terms or to convey our sense of them. Vagueness and ambiguity often go unchecked, relying instead on the assumption that our interlocutor shares our interpretations. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
[emphasis added]It seems necessary to be in agreement on all terms before arguing one way or another on an issue. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
[emphasis added]If asked whether or not I believe there is a God,I require you provide a definition. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Definitions require a semantic thesis — Cartesian trigger-puppets
necessary and sufficient conditions — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Isn't there a problem with the 'naturalistic fallacy'? The medical standards may be too low or otherwise in error. In that case we could say without contradiction that someone's heart is functioning in accordance with medical standards but is not functioning properly. So they do not mean the same thing - if they did, it would be self-contradictory to say one and deny the other. — Cuthbert
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