But note that you supposed ¬P — Leontiskos
what proof of Modus tollens do you like? — flannel jesus
Which premise do you think provides us with such information? — Leontiskos
(S∧¬P) does not favor S over ¬P in the case of a contradiction — Leontiskos
The issue is that we don't know S is true — Leontiskos
When you say "we know S is true" you are stipulating — Leontiskos
ρ→(φ^~φ) (premise)
~(φ^~φ) (law of non contradiction)
:. ~ρ (modus tollens) — flannel jesus
How absurd does the world need to be for us to become existentialist overcomers? How meaningless does it need to be for us to become self-generating overmen? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Physical objects, on the other hand, can be truly unique in this physical universe (but almost never in the physical multiverse). — Tarskian
(S∧¬P)→(B∧¬B)
¬P
∴ S — Leontiskos
Then again, this probably also amounts to the same thing. — Count Timothy von Icarus
perhaps there is the mistake — Lionino
RAA proves (¬S v P). — Leontiskos
"A implies a contradiction" is false, it is the same as saying "A does not imply a contradiction" — Lionino
But (a→b)∧(a→¬b) being False simply means that A does not imply a contradiction, it should not mean A is True automatically. — Lionino
Yes, modus tollens relies on contraposition. Let me explain the connection:
Modus tollens is a valid logical argument form that follows this structure:
If P, then Q.
Not Q.
Therefore, not P.
Contraposition is a logical equivalence that states:
(P → Q) ≡ (¬Q → ¬P)
In other words, "If P, then Q" is logically equivalent to "If not Q, then not P."
Modus tollens uses contraposition implicitly:
It starts with the premise "If P, then Q."
When we observe "Not Q," we use contraposition to infer "If not Q, then not P."
Then we apply modus ponens to "If not Q, then not P" and "Not Q" to conclude "Not P."
So, while modus tollens is often presented as a distinct rule of inference, it can be seen as a combination of contraposition and modus ponens.
But (a→b)∧(a→¬b) being False simply means that A does not imply a contradiction, it should not mean A is True automatically. — Lionino
If a → c it does. Contraposition, flip em and switch em (reverse the order and negate both). — Count Timothy von Icarus
Modus Tollens: ρ→φ, ~φ ⊢ ~ρ
RAA: ρ→(φ^~φ) ⊢ ~ρ — Banno
To my mind the explosion only occurs if you don't reject either of the two premises. — Leontiskos
When we do a reductio
A, A→¬B∧B ⊢ ¬A is valid
But A, A→¬B∧B ⊢ A is also valid
So the question is: how do we choose between either? Isn't it by modus tollens? — Lionino
But that's because the two assumptions, A and A→¬B∧B, are inconsistent. — Banno
1. a → (b ∧ ~b)
2. If b is true (b ∧ ~b) is false. If b is false (b ∧ ~b) is false, so (b ∧ ~b) is false.
3.~a → ~(b ∧ ~b) - contraposition (1)
4. ~a - modus ponens (2,3) — Count Timothy von Icarus
Reductio: — Lionino
Either inference, ρ→~μ or μ→~ρ, is valid. — Banno
Can you see the answer? — Banno
ρ,μ ⊢φ^~φ⊢ (ρ→~μ) ^ (μ→~ρ) — Banno