Now it seems to me that Pluralism is the better of these options, but the devil is in the detail, and the discussion is on-going. — Banno
Perhaps if we construe “every case” broadly enough, we will find that there are no valid arguments left, and hence the result will not be logical monism, but a form of logical nihilism, or something close to it.
Is there a risk with pluralism that one might simply select the logic one wants to suit ourselves? How do we determine which logic is appropriate for a given situation/problem? Sorry if this is a banal quesion. — Tom Storm
Sounds fair. Is there a risk with pluralism that one might simply select the logic one wants to suit ourselves? How do we determine which logic is appropriate for a given situation/problem? Sorry if this is a banal quesion. — Tom Storm
Historically logic is the thing by which (discursive) knowledge is produced. When I combine two or more pieces of knowledge to arrive at new knowledge I am by definition utilizing logic. If logical pluralism were true then you could know X and I could know ~X, and we would both have true knowledge, which is absurd. When, "two logics over the same domain reach opposite conclusions," we do not arrive at an "interesting question." We arrive at contradictory conclusions and conflicting arguments, one of which must be wrong. — Leontiskos
But how we might deal with a case where, say, two logics over the same domain reach opposite conclusions remains an interesting question. — Banno
A logic to decide between competing logics. — Banno
Logical pluralists seem to argue that different contexts require different logics and this seems to be determined by the kinds of reasoning or the goals of inquiry involved. — Tom Storm
Logical pluralism takes many forms, but the most philosophically interesting and controversial versions hold that more than one logic can be correct, that is: logics L1 and L2 can disagree about which arguments are valid, and both can be getting things right. — SEP | Logical Pluralism
How common would this be and how do we determine which logic to employ? — Tom Storm
Could we end up with an infinite regress? — Tom Storm
From the SEP article:...dialetheism... — frank
And that is where we stand. Presuming that there is one true logic is no longer viable.Since Aristotle, the assumption that consistency is a requirement for truth, validity, meaning, and rationality, has gone largely unchallenged. Modern investigations into dialetheism, in pressing the possibility of inconsistent theories that are nevertheless meaningful, valid, rational, and true, call that assumption into question.
And that is where we stand. Presuming that there is one true logic is no longer viable. — Banno
So Logical Nihilism has me returning to what I had taken as pretty much settled; that scientific progress does not result from a more or less algorithmic method - induction, falsification and so one - but is instead the result of certain sorts of liberal social interaction - of moral and aesthetic choice. — Banno
This?
So Logical Nihilism has me returning to what I had taken as pretty much settled; that scientific progress does not result from a more or less algorithmic method - induction, falsification and so one - but is instead the result of certain sorts of liberal social interaction - of moral and aesthetic choice.
— Banno — Banno
along the lines of Feyerabend's "Anything goes". — Banno
So Logical Nihilism has me returning to what I had taken as pretty much settled; that scientific progress does not result from a more or less algorithmic method - induction, falsification and so one - but is instead the result of certain sorts of liberal social interaction - of moral and aesthetic choice. — Banno
"Anything goes" is a recipe for conservatism, since if anything goes then the way things are is as viable as the way they might be, and there is no sound reason for change. — Banno
↪Leontiskos ↪Banno To what extent does your disagreement on this involve, perhaps, one being a conservative and the other liberal? — Tom Storm
How do we determine which logic is appropriate for a given situation/problem? Sorry if this is a banal quesion. — Tom Storm
But the substantive question relates to knowledge, which is why my first post in this thread concentrated on that topic. — Leontiskos
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