I would guess that Tones regards it as unconventional. — NotAristotle
It's not a matter of what I "regard" to be the case. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Are there any introductory textbooks that talk about the principle of explosion? — NotAristotle
I said "principle of explosion" not "disjunctive syllogism" — NotAristotle
Are there any introductory textbooks that talk about the principle of explosion? — NotAristotle
So is an explosive argument valid? In one sense it is, and in one sense it is not. — Leontiskos
enthymeme — Leontiskos
He is basically saying, "If a conclusion is inferentially reachable from the premises, then the argument is valid, even if the argument does not present the necessary inferences." — Leontiskos
Do you make any distinction between premises and inference rules? — Srap Tasmaner
I'm trying to understand this. Are you arguing against the cut rule? — Srap Tasmaner
There are some logicians in these parts who view logic as mere symbol manipulation — Leontiskos
I'm sure you could find that in a textbook, but one must recognize that such textbooks presuppose that the premises are not inconsistent. — Leontiskos
(1) I'm not a logician and (2) I do not regard logic as mere symbol manipulation. — TonesInDeepFreeze
But that the definition of validity implies that there being no interpretation with all true premises implies that the argument is valid - that I am not so sure about, because I do not see how a definition can imply anything. — NotAristotle
I was trying to understand how the definition implies that in terms of symbolic logic. — NotAristotle
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