(~a -> ~b) is an assertion or inference against (a -> b) — Corvus
One of the ways it can be done is applying the contradictions to (a -> b), — Corvus
One of the ways it can be done is applying the contradictions to (a -> b), and check if it is true or false with the reality. — Corvus
But why do you talk about the Bio, in the middle of talking about order and logic? — Corvus
This is the first time I am reading you talking about it. — Corvus
What do you think it means? — Corvus
I think that's a fantastic example of implication to look at. — flannel jesus
What do you mean? — Corvus
I'm not following what you say here. — Banno
The wikipedia page on the Historicity of Jesus says — Brendan Golledge
Further conversation becomes like a child hitting the dog's cage with a stick. It will bark and growl back at you; fun, but progress will not be made. — Banno
When I asked you about the If Red Light then Drive logic for your agree or disagreement on it, you said it was order, not Logic — Corvus
How time works? — Corvus
you keep running away from the question with smoky gibberish — Corvus
I have asked you first, but you never answered my question — Corvus
Do you agree the orders must be expressed in sentences, and the sentences must have truth values to be effective as the orders? — Corvus
Any event which can be described in human language can be translated into the formal logic — Corvus
Is it a valid inference, on which we must all agree, or is it an intuition, a mere hunch or impression? — Banno
But when we notice that we are thinking things, there is a certain first notion, which is concluded from no syllogism; nor even when someone says, I think, therefore I am, or I exist, he deduces existence from thought by a syllogism, but recognizes it as a thing known in itself by the simple observation of the mind, as is evident from the fact that, if he deduced it by a syllogism, he must first have known this greater , everything that thinks is or exists; but surely rather he learns himself, from what he experiences with himself, that it cannot be as he thinks unless he exists. — Replies
I was not denying that we must first know what is meant by thought, existence, certainty; again, we must know such things as that it is impossible for that which is thinking to be non-existent; but I thought it needless to enumerate these notions, for they are of the greatest simplicity, and by themselves they can give us no knowledge that anything exists — Principles
I am just telling you what is correct from the muddles that you folks have been spewing out — Corvus
Thought requires a thinker, an author of thought. But this relationship is not reciprocal: it is false that if “I exist, therefore I think”, as I can exist and not think (for example if I am in a very deep sleep or in a vegetative state). — https://duvida-metodica.blogspot.com/2009/04/objeccao-descartes-o-cogito-e-um.html
What would anyone gain translating what you are saying? — Corvus
In his talk, Dr. Prado explained that the oft-quoted phrase, “Cogito, ergo sum” (I think, therefore I am) was abandoned by Descartes for requiring a suppressed premise. Descartes revised the “Cogito” statement to the “Ego sum, ego existo” statement. — https://www.queensu.ca/alumnireview/articles/2016-05-03/ego-sum-ego-existo-descartes-divisive-legacy
I am not sure what you mean here — Corvus
You obviously are avoiding to answer for the question whether you agree or disagree with the example propositional logic shown calling it order — Corvus
The only basis for your claim, they are not, is because no scholar says D's argument is contradictory? — Corvus
Your claims on D seem to be based on some type of religious beliefs rather than academic theories. — Corvus
Any event which can be described in human language can be translated into the formal logic. It is called propositional logic. — Corvus
No one said that the lived experience of Catholics or Southern Europeans is invalid — ToothyMaw
The mass propaganda of Protestants against Catholics is well known.
— javi2541997
Is it? By whom? Which particular Protestants are waging what propaganda campaigns? — Vera Mont
but there is no evidence of a black legend perpetrated against, what? — ToothyMaw
People revere the Pope the world over, revered more so than MLK ever was — ToothyMaw
As for microaggressions or generational trauma - they are modern constructions that developed alongside an increasing desire to accommodate disadvantaged and vulnerable individuals — ToothyMaw
What do minorities and European nations have to do with each other? — ToothyMaw
but they are reasonable and interesting inferences for the premises of cogito. — Corvus
I wonder if you read any Descartes at all yourself. — Corvus
If red light, then drive away. — Corvus
Cum autem advertimus nos esse res cogitantes, prima quaedam notio est, quae ex nullo syllogismo concluditur; neque etiam cum quis dicit, ego cogito, ergo sum, sive existo, existentiam ex cogitatione per syllogismum deducit, sed tanquam rem per se notam simplici mentis intuitu agnoscit, ut patet ex eo quod, si eam per syllogismum deduceret, novisse prius debuisset istam majorem, illud omne, quod cogitat, est sive existit; atqui profecto ipsam potius discit, ex eo quod apud se experiatur, fieri non posse ut cogitet, nisi existat.
About that:But when we notice that we are thinking things, there is a certain first notion, which is concluded from no syllogism; nor even when someone says, I think, therefore I am, or I exist, he deduces existence from thought by a syllogism, but recognizes it as a thing known in itself by the simple observation of the mind, as is evident from the fact that, if he deduced it by a syllogism, he must first have known this greater , everything that thinks is or exists; but surely rather he learns himself, from what he experiences with himself, that it cannot be as he thinks unless he exists.
And more generally it determines his [Descartes'] preference for demonstration by analysis which is supposed to reflect the order in which truths are actually discovered as opposed to demonstration by synthesis which he seems to identify with the axiomatic method, axioms being a proper sub-set of general principles.
It's totally understandable to go to the original French, but it really ought not to matter — flannel jesus
and no one has set the inference out for us in a valid way. — Banno
People who share your bias with you will accept your opinion as evidence? No doubt. — Vera Mont
If you accuse one person, you are expected to show evidence against that one particular person — Vera Mont
Surely — ToothyMaw
Or it could just be a coincidence that the native speakers here are pointing out thattherefore is being taken by Corvus as causal and chronological, when in fact this is not the case, AND this is real possibility for native speakers of Korean to take the word in those incorrect ways. — Bylaw
Anyway, Descartes did not know English, he never went to England, he did not write in English. He wrote in French and Latin. The statements are "je pense donc je suis" and "cogitō ergo sum".
The Larousse dictionary is clear:
1. Marque la conclusion d'un raisonnement, la conséquence d'une assertion ; en conséquence, par suite de quoi : J'ignore tout de la question, donc je me tais.
"Donc" marks a logical conclusion. Je suis is the conclusion of je pense.
Ergo means the same as donc, Gaffiot 2016:
2 ergō, (5) conj. de coordination, donc, ainsi donc, par conséquent : Enn. d. Cic. CM 10 ; Cic. Fin. 2, 34, etc. || [avec pléonasme] : ergo igitur Pl. Trin. 756 ; itaque ergo Ter. Eun. 317 ; Liv. 1, 25, 2 ; 3, 31, 5, etc. || [concl. logique] : Cic. Fin. 2, 97 ; 5, 24 ; Læl. 88, etc.; ergo etiam Cic. Nat. 3, 43 ; 3, 51 ; ergo adeo Cic. Leg. 2, 23, donc aussi, donc encore
You see then it marks conclusion too. From "cogitō" I can conclude that "sum". — Lionino
Conclusion is always consequent of the premises. You never conclude something, then list premises afterwards — Corvus
And the conclusion of "I think" is "I am". — Lionino
If we agree to infer that Descartes Cogito's premise was I doubt everything — Corvus
I doubt everything. (P1)
But I don't doubt Thinking. (P2) — Corvus
So you think of the Cogito as a poem, and are not convinced by it, but by the argument you find in it? — Banno
“Am thinking” says enough. — Fire Ologist
And this article reaffirms it:Wherefore I may lay this down as a Principle, that whenever this sentence I am, I exist, is spoken or thought of by Me, ’tis necessarily True.
Finally, at the end of the paragraph he mentions the conclusion to be drawn when I think that I am something, namely, "I am, I exist, is necessarily true each time that I pronounce it, or that I mentally conceive it." Such a conclusion is in effect a gloss on Descartes' own use of "ergo" and once again reference to the mode of thought has appeared twice. — Descartes, Russell, Hintikka and the Self
In a letter to Bourdin, Descartes instead puts it as "ego cogitans existo". It is not so much that we take "I think" and then conclude "I exist", but every thought gives the certainty of existence. Which is why Descartes says, as quoted by Banno, that it is almost as if he would stop existing if he stopped thinking.It is, on the contrary, or so Descartes would have it, in thinking and the certainty about itself that it entails that I at the same time become fully conscious and by the same token certain of my own existence as opposed merely to acquiescing in it more or less automatically even when I seem to be calling it into question.
My overall impression is that logic is not a strong point hereabouts. — Banno
they do if they are by definition thinking things. That's rather the point — Banno
you went into great lengths about the difference between extended substance and cognitive substance, but having to invoke dualism to solve this issue counts against the whole enterprise — Banno
In particular, the bit where you stop existing when you go to sleep. — Banno
Let me ask therefore what I am, a thinking thing, but what is that?
You mistook me for some other folks in the thread. — Corvus
If you accuse someone, you're expected to provide evidence — Vera Mont
Then we will be required to provide a literature-review of a topic that does not even exist academically.one random Christian guy fought against slavery a long time ago. — ToothyMaw
Christianity had the Crusades — alan1000
the Spanish Inquisition — alan1000
and the massacres of South American native innocents — alan1000
Sure, something is doing the thinking — Banno
When we conclude that that thought isn't ours and we only have a memory of it, we can no longer conclude that anything exists, as that memory is no proof of anything thinking; if anything, it is proof that I exist, because I am remembering it, and remembering is thinking. — Lionino
why did you laugh at the suggestion from Corvus that you cease to exist when not thinking? — Banno