You say it yourself: "syntactical role". — Lionino
neither am I interested if English "grammarians" — Lionino
I don't know what point you are making about logic when you rule out "If ___, then ___".
— TonesInDeepFreeze
None. I made the comment standalone without tagging anyone and you replied to it.
But it is not that important, I write it wrongly too for the purpose of clarity. — Lionino
The law of identity is allowed by constructivism. It "withstands foundational scrutiny" by constructivism. No strawman.
13m — TonesInDeepFreeze
Rhetorical question: is it possible to misspeak, which is to say to speak wrongly, without committing a grammar mistake? — Lionino
My reply to Leontiskos, which you asked about, is exactly that, except that it is laws of logic that a system may deny, not laws of thought. — Lionino
Is grammar not the rules which give us what can be said right or wrong in language? — Lionino
I just pointed out that there are issues in assuming two of them. — Tarskian
One may choose different ways of thinking but every way of thinking that one may choose still has fundamental rules of rationality. — Lionino
That something is necessary for rationality (under a given definition of 'rationality') doesn't entail that people may not break "laws of thought".
— TonesInDeepFreeze
I can't imagine how it does not entail unless you are working under a very thin definition of rationality. — Lionino
And it does not dialetheism permit conceiving such things?
— TonesInDeepFreeze
I personally don't think dialethism is universally applicable or says anything deep about human rationality. It may be helpful as a gimmick to work around self-reference paradox, but that is about it. — Lionino
Agreed. The identity of indiscernibles is criticized in other areas of mathematics.No, you said that the only law that "withstands scrutiny" for constructivism is non-contradiction. And that is false. — TonesInDeepFreeze
What are some criticisms in mathematics of the identity of indiscernibles? — TonesInDeepFreeze
Principle 2, on the other hand, is controversial; Max Black famously argued against it.[5]
Black, Max (1952). "The Identity of Indiscernibles". Mind. 61 (242): 153–64.
"I was literally dying" is well formed even if untrue. — TonesInDeepFreeze
No, 'literally' there is not violating the syntactical role of an adjective. — TonesInDeepFreeze
"Bob has a red French horn" is syntactical even though the speaker meant that Bob's French horn is loud. — TonesInDeepFreeze
When people say — not lying or confused — that their cat is black, but they actually have a dog who is white, and they are thinking of their white dog but saying "My cat is black", they are using the words 'cat' and 'black' wrongly. — Lionino
What is regarded as rational may be different for different people. — TonesInDeepFreeze
then I will just call it "my laws of thought" and then we are back to the problem of solipsism — Lionino
Doesn't matter what the definition is. People may break all kinds of norms of rationality in their thinking. — TonesInDeepFreeze
The way it read was that there are laws of logic that may be broken but not laws of thought. — TonesInDeepFreeze
But if any law of logic may be also a law of thought, then there are laws of thought that may be broken too. — TonesInDeepFreeze
And it wasn't stated as to what systems may deny, but merely as to what laws may deny. — TonesInDeepFreeze
for any law of thought there may be a system that denies the law, so any law of thought could be denied — TonesInDeepFreeze
By syntactical, I mean grammatical. — TonesInDeepFreeze
It is not in physics, not in javascript, neither is it in morality, it is in grammar, therefore it is grammatically incorrect. — Lionino
It is semantically wrong, but not grammatically wrong. — TonesInDeepFreeze
But that still doesn't make "My cat is black" ungrammatical — TonesInDeepFreeze
"The cat is black" and ask, "is that grammatical?" You don't track down the speaker and find out whether he knows the definitions of 'cat' and 'black'. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Semantics is part of grammar. — Lionino
What is regarded as rational may be different for different people.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
I addressed that before, it is tangential: — Lionino
Doesn't matter what the definition is. People may break all kinds of norms of rationality in their thinking.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Ok, clearly you are operating under a thin definition of rationality, where one even can think irrationality. — Lionino
Let's understand instead 'laws of thought' as the necessary conditions/operations for my/human/any rationality. Since they are necessary, they cannot be broken. If a mind does not obey them, that mind is no longer a (my/human) rationality. — Lionino
The way it read was that there are laws of logic that may be broken but not laws of thought.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Correct.
But if any law of logic may be also a law of thought, then there are laws of thought that may be broken too.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Instead, if a law of logic can somehow holistically and correctly express a law of thought, that law of logic cannot be broken. If it can, it is not longer a law of thought, as by the definition I gave above. — Lionino
And it wasn't stated as to what systems may deny, but merely as to what laws may deny.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Wasn't it? — Lionino
↪Leontiskos I don't think there are laws of logic that cannot be broken, but that there are laws of thought that can't be broken (for obvious reasons). Some laws of logic may express those laws of thought. But that is just a semantic contention. — Lionino
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