TonesInDeepFreeze
Leontiskos
Michael
Leontiskos
I don’t know what you mean by “presupposing” the principle of explosion. — Michael
Michael
Leontiskos
NotAristotle
TonesInDeepFreeze
Leontiskos
NotAristotle
NotAristotle
TonesInDeepFreeze
TonesInDeepFreeze
NotAristotle
TonesInDeepFreeze
But that doesn't work if A and not-A are both true. — NotAristotle
Leontiskos
But that doesn't work if A and not-A are both true. That's my point. The proof doesn't work. The proof only works if you ignore that A is also true. — NotAristotle
In cases of inconsistent premises what happens is that the person arguing arbitrarily makes use of some premises while conveniently ignoring others. For example:... — Leontiskos
TonesInDeepFreeze
I don't get how you get Q from (P or Q) if P is true. — NotAristotle
Leontiskos
The rule is: If P v Q is on a line, and ~P is on a line, then infer Q.
The rule is NOT: If P v Q is on a line, and ~P is on a line, and P is not on a line, then infer Q. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Michael
This should not be so hard. — Leontiskos
TonesInDeepFreeze
NotAristotle
Leontiskos
It is simply an a priori fact that from “p and not p” one can derive any conclusion, and so any argument with “p” and “not p” as premises is valid. — Michael
TonesInDeepFreeze thinks that any argument with inconsistent premises is valid, and that the principle of explosion does not need to be presupposed in order to say this. Michael disagrees. He thinks that any argument with inconsistent premises is valid, and that the principle of explosion does need to be presupposed in order to say this. — Leontiskos
Leontiskos
I think that is right, it is arbitrary. Although I would say that an argument can have inconsistent premises and still be valid as long as those premises do not do any "work" in the argument — NotAristotle
Leontiskos
What textbook says that. If you can cite that statement I'll sell the farm. — NotAristotle
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