what is actually quoted in the literature from Pierce seems to be about listing permutations of Boolean operators rather than showing truth. — Banno
completeness and consistency — Banno
Sure, and that is where it seems to stop. Wittgenstein does the same thing in 5.101. Again, the novelty in the Tractatus is set out here:The paper shows a Peirce matrix with truth values. — TonesInDeepFreeze
4.45 For n elementary propositions there are Ln possible groups of truth-conditions. The groups of truth-conditions that are obtainable from the truth-possibilities of a given number of elementary propositions can be arranged in a series.
4.46 Among the possible groups of truth-conditions there are two extreme cases. In one of these cases the proposition is true for all the truth-possibilities of the elementary propositions. We say that the truth-conditions are tautological. In the second case the proposition is false for all the truth-possibilities: the truth-conditions are contradictory . In the first case we call the proposition a tautology; in the second, a contradiction.
Ludwig Wittgenstein is generally credited with inventing and popularizing the truth table in his Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus, which was completed in 1918 and published in 1921.[2] Such a system was also independently proposed in 1921 by Emil Leon Post.[3]
— Wiki. — Banno
What is original is that Witti points out how to use a truth table to determine tautology or contradiction. — Banno
The paper shows a Peirce matrix with truth values.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Sure, and that is where it seems to stop. — Banno
Is it a given that Peirce didn't observe that and Wittgenstein did? — TonesInDeepFreeze
Does Anellis show explicitly that Peirce used a truth table in this way? I don't see that. In the diagram on p.61 he lists some values for three terms. In the diagram on p.62, he lists the possible values for binary connectives.But a truth table determines validity. — TonesInDeepFreeze
...not explicitly for determining the validity of any wff. Now in the absence of further evidence, it is reasonable to supose that Wittgenstein was the first to do this. What is absent is something showing that it had occurred to Peirce that the validity of a given wff can be shown by setting out it's truth table. Wittgenstein does set that out.Peirce’s object appears to have been to introduce matrices “partly as an aid in his classification of relations, and partly for the sake of illustrations or examples... — p.64
1. A→(B∧¬B) assumption
2. A assumption
3. B∧¬B 1,2, conditional proof
4. ~A 2, 3 reductio — Banno
1. A -> (B & ~B) {1}
2. A {2}
3. B & ~B {1, 2}
4. ~A {1} — TonesInDeepFreeze
Rho is assumed and Mu is supposed, and if someone doesn't know the difference between an assumption/premise and a supposition then they won't understand a reductio. — Leontiskos
An odd thing to say, since a contradiction will have "F" all the way down it's main operator — Banno
Tones thinks that ¬(1) and ¬(2) both follow from (1, 2, 3). — Leontiskos
If you want to bring clarity you should explain what inference you used to draw (4). As it happens, truth tables don't adjudicate contradictions. I don't get to say:
1. P→Q
2. P
3. ~Q
4. ∴ Q {See truth table for 1, 2; avert eyes from 3 at all costs. I repeat: do not allow 3 a seat at the truth table!}
(The fact that you think this sort of thing can be adjudicated by a truth table is proof that non-truth-functionality is in your blind spot.) — Leontiskos
1. A -> (B & ~B) {1}
2. A {2}
3. B & ~B {1, 2}
Do (A implies B) and (A implies notB) contradict each other? — flannel jesus
So as things stand, 41% of folk got it wrong. Pretty sad. — Banno
Tones thinks that ¬(1) and ¬(2) both follow from (1, 2, 3). — Leontiskos
Wrong. By the definition of 'valid' in context of classical logic, they are valid. — TonesInDeepFreeze
all that can be agreed, and yet we still hold that Anellis has not carried his case. — Banno
TonesInDeepFreeze
But a truth table determines validity.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Does Anellis show explicitly that Peirce used a truth table in this way? — Banno
Now in the absence of further evidence, it is reasonable to supose that Wittgenstein was the first to do this. — Banno
1. A -> (B & ~B) {1}
2. A {2}
3. B & ~B {1, 2}
4. ~A {1}
— TonesInDeepFreeze
The reason these are not RAA is because there is no supposition taking place — Leontiskos
Tones thinks that ¬(1) and ¬(2) both follow from (1, 2, 3). — Leontiskos
A truth table does not adjudicate between (1) and (2). It does not perform the and-elimination of the reductio for us. What Tones is doing is just arbitrarily ignoring inputs to the truth table: — Leontiskos
It goes without saying that there is no rule of inference that forces one rather than the other.
— Leontiskos
Yes, in the exact sense that there is no inference rule that dictates what set G must be. — TonesInDeepFreeze
when I ask Tones why he drew one conclusion rather than the other, he tells me to look at the truth table — Leontiskos
Wrong. By the definition of 'valid' in context of classical logic, they are valid.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
According to what definition are both proofs valid? — Leontiskos
By the definition I posted in this thread probably at least three times. Again:
An inference from a set of formulas G to a formula P is valid
if and only if
every interpretation in which all the members of G are true is an interpretation in which P is true.
For sentential logic, that is equivalent with:
An inference from a set of formulas G to a formula P is valid
if and only if
Every row in the truth table in which all the formulas in G are true is row in which P is true. — TonesInDeepFreeze
1. A -> (B & ~B) {1}
2. A {2}
3. B & ~B {1, 2}
4. ~A {1}
1. A -> (B & ~B) {1}
2. A {2}
3. B & ~B {1, 2}
4. ~(A -> (B & ~B)) {2} — TonesInDeepFreeze
1. P -> Q {1}
2. P {2}
3. ~Q {3}
4. Q {1, 2} — TonesInDeepFreeze
To say ∴Q instead of ∴~P is to selectively consider the truth table for (1, 2), rather than the truth table for (1, 3). To think that a truth table settles the matter is to ignore the contradiction, which in this case is present in (1, 2, 3). — Leontiskos
That rare combination of hubris and senility. Gotta love it. — Leontiskos
Leon has lost much of his credibility in this thread. You have been remarkably patient and persistent. — Banno
Go back and see. — Leontiskos
Were there any that were not from you?there have been complaints about the way he comports himself — Leontiskos
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.