TonesInDeepFreeze
By syntactical, I mean grammatical.
— TonesInDeepFreeze — Lionino
TonesInDeepFreeze
for any law of thought there may be a system that denies the law, so any law of thought could be denied
— TonesInDeepFreeze
I imagine by 'law of thought' you mean 'law of logic' here? — Lionino
TonesInDeepFreeze
Everytime you say those well-formed phrases are syntactically correct, I agree. But they are not grammatically correct if the speaker thought/meant something other than what those words actually mean. So I cannot say they are grammatically correct. — Lionino
TonesInDeepFreeze
When you quote people here, the original italics or bold are lost, so it is of common understanding that, when a quote features those, it is the quoter who has added them for a purpose. — Lionino
TonesInDeepFreeze
TonesInDeepFreeze
the whole system and structure of a language or of languages in general, usually taken as consisting of syntax and morphology (including inflections) and sometimes also phonology and semantics. — Lionino
The whole system and structure of a language or of languages in general, usually taken as consisting of syntax and morphology (including inflections) and sometimes also phonology and semantics; grammar was one of the seven liberal arts.
— Oxford Reference — Lionino
TonesInDeepFreeze
You can just click on the arrow to see what post the person is referring to instead of guessing. — Lionino
TonesInDeepFreeze
My post there is from 3 hours ago. I was not reiterating anything. — Lionino
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
Of course. It doesn't mean however that it was grammatically correct. We assume it is because we assume the speakers know how to use words. — Lionino
Count Timothy von Icarus
Curiously, the BE article also has to take refuge in modern French words to express itself:
TonesInDeepFreeze
"Rob have a piink horn on his forhead", syntax is fine — Lionino
TonesInDeepFreeze
You would say the first one is grammatically wrong, because 'criteria' is plural. Here is the problem: there are actually some people in the world whose first name is Criteria. — Lionino
TonesInDeepFreeze
But, if I recall correctly, you said that in general laws of logic can be broken, as you even gave an example of breaking the law of noncontradiction.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Yes — Lionino
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
But, if I recall correctly, you said that in general laws of logic can be broken, as you even gave an example of breaking the law of noncontradiction. Moreover, if there is a single law of logic that can be broken, and that law of logic corresponds with a law of thought, then there is a law of thought that can be broken. Moreover, even that point is not required, since we know that people do break laws of thought. Though, of course, if a certain law of thought is required for rationality then it can't be broken without incurring irrationality. — TonesInDeepFreeze
TonesInDeepFreeze
I have edited the post you are quoting. So now it reads "as the necessary conditions/operations for my/human/any mind". In this sense, I don't think it can be broken, as the mind, definitionally, cannot operate outside of these conditions. — Lionino
TonesInDeepFreeze
I still think the LNC overall articulates a law of thought — Lionino
TonesInDeepFreeze
Merriam Webster is not reliable neither is it competent. — Lionino
The usual sense of 'grammar' is 'syntax'
— TonesInDeepFreeze
It is not. — Lionino
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