Yeah, but if you affirm that "death" is equivalent with "not-life," you'll be stuck affirming Plato's argument for the immortality of the soul in the Phaedo, which in turn implies that you may be reincarnated for innumerable lifetimes where you have to debate these same topics before finally achieving henosis and completing the process of exitus and reditus. That's a pretty rough commitment to have to make. — Count Timothy von Icarus
opprobrium — TonesInDeepFreeze
Were debating whether to call certain formulations "modus ponens." — Hanover
The basic idea is "formally correct but misleading". Akin to sophistry. Or to non-cooperative implicature, like saying "Everyone on the boat is okay" when it's only true because no one is left on the boat and all the dead and injured are in the water. — Srap Tasmaner
Tones think(s) logic is arbitrary symbol manipulation — Leontiskos
think you're treating A -> ~A as if it's hypothetically true. They're just declaring it to be necessarily false. — frank
1.
A -> ~A
~ A
Therefore A (1,2 mp) — Hanover
2.
A->~A
~A
Therefore ~ A (2) — Hanover
in #1 A is true, but in #2 A is false — Hanover
Test #2 for validity (which is really just a clearer restatement of #1 — Hanover
Premise #1 is logically equivalent to ~A. — Hanover
~A
A
Therefore A.
Therefore ~A is also true.
This is not a valid argument. — Hanover
I was looking at the argument schema presented in the OP. If you imagine this as the formal representation of a substantive argument, you would have to have serious doubts about what was going on in that argument. This was the "veneer" of logic I was talking about. Any argument that could be formalized in the schema presented would instantiate an accepted form in a deeply questionable way. Hence "sophistry". That wasn't intended to refer to you, to your explanations, to anyone in this thread, but to a hypothetical argument that would fit the schema under discussion. — Srap Tasmaner
But what do you mean by 'abusive'?
— TonesInDeepFreeze
The basic idea is "formally correct but misleading". Akin to sophistry. Or to non-cooperative implicature, like saying "Everyone on the boat is okay" when it's only true because no one is left on the boat and all the dead and injured are in the water.
In this case, for instance, it is suggested that we conclude ~A by modus ponens. — Srap Tasmaner
we get to ~A by noting that A→~A is materially equivalent to ~A v ~A. Now what kind of disjunction is that? It's a well-formed-formula ― no one can deny that ― but it's hardly what we usually have in mind as a disjunction. It's "heads I win, tails you lose." That's abusive.
There is, in this case, a veneer of logic over what could scarcely be considered rational argumentation. If this appearance of rationality serves any purpose, it must be to mislead, hence abusive, eristic, sophistical, non-cooperative. — Srap Tasmaner
If a premise is necessarily false, then the argument is valid. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Is it a problem that "not-(A and not-A)" is also a valid conclusion of the argument? — NotAristotle
But with validity, aren't we looking at what happens with all the premises are true? If a premise is necessarily false, can we still look at the argument in terms of validity? — frank
So we know the first premise is necessarily false. That means the conclusion has to be false for validity. Is the conclusion false? — frank
I think the first premise is necessarily false in propositional logic. — frank
(1) The first premise in that argument is not necessarily false. — TonesInDeepFreeze
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