Do you agree with him for the same reasons he thinks? — flannel jesus
He thinks that if someone accepts "I think therefore I am", they must also accept "I don't think, therefore I am not". — flannel jesus
I disagree with that. — Fire Ologist
Let them show us how. — Banno
But Corvus is correct that the Cogito is not valid, at least in its usual form. "I think, therefore I am", rendered as "p⊃q", is invalid. — Banno
Your formula seems incorrect. This is the correct one. — Corvus
I agree cogito is not a logical statement, and it looks doubtful if it is even an inference. — Corvus
(P -> Q) = -P or Q (P. Bogart) — Corvus
I think → I am. P is "I think" and Q is "I am".
P – Q – ¬P∨Q (aka P→Q)
0 – 0 – 1 "I don't think and I am not" holds P → Q
1 – 0 – 0 "I think and I am not" does not hold P → Q
0 – 1 – 1 "I don't think and I am" holds P → Q
1 – 1 – 1 "I think and I am" holds P→Q — Lionino
You, the existing one (as premise), thinking or saying or being, to conclude “I am” - it’s not bad logic, it just just a tautology that doesn’t tell you anything you didn’t already know. — Fire Ologist
It seems tautological because it is so obvious, and it is obvious to us now because he pointed out, but he did have to point it out. — Lionino
Of course it is valid. Hence the assumption, Not P -> Not Q is valid. That was all it was trying to present. You too, seems not knowing the difference between validity and truth. Something is valid doesn't mean it is also true.That means nothing in this context. You can change it to https://www.umsu.de/trees/#(p~5q)~2(p~5~3q) or https://www.umsu.de/trees/#(p~5q)~2(~3p~5q) and it remains valid. — Lionino
I never said Bogart was no good. I said Bogart was not a god. You seem to keep distorting the facts habitually. His point can be taken where it proves my point in the argument, but Bogart is not a god, and he is not no good. I don't know he is good or not good, and I know he is not a god.Curious, you were just saying how Bogart is not god. In any case, I already proved how this is in full agreement with Descartes: — Lionino
There is no logical ground to deduce Thinking -> Exisiting.Thinking → existing
I think
Therefore I exist — Lionino
Cogito cannot be examined for truths. Therefore it is a meaningless statement, and Cogito ergo sum is a false statement based on the meaningless premise. — Corvus
Thinking is objective content. It’s an instance of general being sought as a ground for something to know. — Fire Ologist
Therefore I think therefore I am is meaningless statement to the rest of the world, and it is not an objective statement. — Corvus
Therefore I think therefore I am is a meaningless statement to the rest of the world — Corvus
Descartes's statement became a fundamental element of Western philosophy, as it purported to provide a certain foundation for knowledge in the face of radical doubt. While other knowledge could be a figment of imagination, deception, or mistake, Descartes asserted that the very act of doubting one's own existence served—at minimum—as proof of the reality of one's own mind
But "I think therefore I am" or better put, "thinking 'I am'" to myself demonstrates the objective fact of thinking as content in the world. The world is just very small, objectively comprised of me thinking "I am." — Fire Ologist
It is a psychological mumbling or monologue, or as Banno put it correctly, an intuition. — Corvus
So in a sense I agree with you that the syllogism "I think, therefore I am" is really not a good example of syllogism — Fire Ologist
There is no logical ground to deduce Thinking -> Exisiting — Corvus
You too, seems not knowing the difference between validity and truth. Something is valid doesn't mean it is also true. — Corvus
It doesn't need a logical ground — Lionino
What a clown. Goodbye.
— Lionino
Suppose this is a typical response when the hidden ignorance was revealed. :nerd: — Corvus
You too, seems not knowing the difference between validity and truth. Something is valid doesn't mean it is also true.
— Corvus
What a clown. Goodbye.
— Lionino
Suppose this is a typical response when the hidden ignorance was revealed. :nerd: — Corvus
Nothing can think if it doesn't exist. — Lionino
Descartes’s indubitable facts are his own thoughts—using “thought” in the widest possible sense. “I think” is his ultimate premiss. Here the word “I” is really illegitimate; he ought to state his ultimate premiss in the form “there are thoughts.” The word “I” is grammatically convenient, but does not describe a datum. When he goes on to say “I am a thing which thinks,” he is already using uncritically the apparatus of categories handed down by scholasticism. He nowhere proves that thoughts need a thinker, nor is there reason to believe this except in a grammatical sense. — Russell, Bertrand. 1945. A History of Western Philosophy And Its Connection with Political and Social Circumstances from the Earliest Times to the Present Day. New York: Simon and Schuster, p. 567.
What you are saying always seemed so clear to me — Beverley
People often resort to name calling if they are unable to find a way to respond to someone's comments.
I have to say, your patience at trying to get your point across is admirable. I don't think I would have so much patience. I would more likely think, "Let them just believe what they want."
What you are saying always seemed so clear to me, even before I researched how other philosophers criticized Descartes's cogito, I had already come up with similar ideas. — Beverley
Before someone points out that I had a thought, so I must exist, just take it that I am not really here typing this, and you are not really there reading it, just to humour me ;) ) — Beverley
(p→q)↔(¬p∨¬q) is invalid.So it must be P -> Q = Not P or Not Q — Corvus
No, it's invalid. It can still be true under some interpretation. It can also be false under some other interpretation.P -> Q is FALSE. — Corvus
It's not a proper syllogism, yet you present it in syllogistic form? Make up your mind: is it an inference, or not?The catchphrase "I think therefore I am" of course is not a proper syllogism, and it doesn't have to be, the complete argument is:
Thinking → existing
I think
Therefore I exist — Lionino
Is it a valid inference, on which we must all agree, or is it an intuition, a mere hunch or impression?That every single philosophical argument needs to be put in syllogistic shape is a fantasy. It is more than impressive that cogitō ergo sum, the crowning achievement of the father of modern philosophy, needs to be defended against so many bad arguments in a philosophy forum. — Lionino
But of course, that you have not shown the cogito to be invalid does not imply that it is valid. flannel jesus has not shown that the cogito is valid - if indeed that is their supposition. — Banno
People often resort to name calling if they are unable to find a way to respond to someone's comments. — Beverley
he thought that immediately sprang to my mind was, "How do you know?" — Beverley
The thought that immediately sprang to my mind was, "How do you know?" — Beverley
Here the word “I” is really illegitimate; he ought to state his ultimate premiss in the form “there are thoughts.” — Russell, Bertrand. 1945. A History of Western Philosophy And Its Connection with Political and Social Circumstances from the Earliest Times to the Present Day. New York: Simon and Schuster, p. 567.
It's not a proper syllogism, yet you present it in syllogistic form? Make up your mind: is it an inference, or not? — Banno
Is it a valid inference, on which we must all agree, or is it an intuition, a mere hunch or impression? — Banno
This error leads folk to conclude either that we must build our knowledge from solid foundations — Banno
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