NotAristotle
Michael
NotAristotle
Michael
NotAristotle
Banno
Banno
Hanover
What is going on here is not a pedantic mismatch between English and some esoteric academic exercise. Rather, there are ambiguities in the English use of "If... then...", "...or..." and various other terms that we must settle in order to examine the structure of our utterances in detail. — Banno
NotAristotle
↪NotAristotle
Is it worth pointing out, again, that "P→~P" is not a contradiction? If P→~P is true, then P is false.
If that's been said once, it's been said a thousand times... which is not once. — Banno
there are ambiguities in the English use of "If... then...", "...or..." and various other terms that we must settle in order to examine the structure of our utterances in detail. — Banno
Hanover
We might correct them, "well, actually ~Q." "Your reasoning is spot on and logical, it just happens to be that ~P, so while your reasoning is valid, the argument you presented is unsound." — NotAristotle
sime
"I disagree with regards to ordinary language" I'm not quite getting it, what is the disagreement you have concerning ordinary language? You think someone would make an inference from A->not-A to therefore not-A in ordinary language? — NotAristotle
NotAristotle
Banno
That's really sad.Well it seems to me that all we can rely on when it comes to logic is intuition — NotAristotle
NotAristotle
Banno
NotAristotle
NotAristotle
TonesInDeepFreeze
TonesInDeepFreeze
I would expect any statement to be logically consistent under all values of the antecedent. — Benkei
TonesInDeepFreeze
So why do we accept as logically valid a premisse that will result in a logical contradiction under one value of the antecedent? — Benkei
What would be the implications if we would say for any given argument under all values of the antecedent the conclusion may not result in a logical contradiction or the argument will be deemed invalid? — Benkei
TonesInDeepFreeze
definition of negation in intuitionistic logic. — sime
NotAristotle
I am not clear on how A -> not-A "makes sense" if A is true.A -> ~A makes sense whether A is true or A is false. — TonesInDeepFreeze
NotAristotle
TonesInDeepFreeze
In a consistent deductive system , If the sign "Not A" is either taken to be an axiom, or is inferred as a theorem, then it means that the sign "A" is non-referring — sime
In a consistent deductive system , If the sign "Not A" is either taken to be an axiom, or is inferred as a theorem, then it means that the sign "A" is non-referring and hence meaningless in that it fails to denote any element of any possible world among any set of possible worlds that constitutes a model of the axioms. By symmetry, the same could be said of the sign "Not A" being meaningless if A is taken as an axiom, but by model-theoretic traditional the sign A is said to not denote anything in a model if ~A is provable.
For instance, let the sign "A" denote the proposition that the weather is wet in some possible world. If "A" is deductively assumed or proved, then A is a tautology, meaning that the logical interpretation of "A" is stronger than being a mere possibility and denotes the weather being wet in all possible worlds. — sime
TonesInDeepFreeze
I am not clear on how A -> not-A "makes sense" if A is true. — NotAristotle
an argument where all the premises are false and the conclusion is false would necessarily be valid; is that correct? — NotAristotle
I was thinking of:
P->not-Q
not-P
Therefore,
not-Q.
Assuming that all the premises are false and the conclusion is false, the argument must be valid. Is that correct? — NotAristotle
TonesInDeepFreeze
Therefore
NOT A is true, and A refers to nothing. — sime
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