Forget I even mentioned it. It was irrelevant to the discussion. — TheMadFool
Dangerous is not the word I would use. Strict and uncompromising are terms that I think of when reflecting on logic. — Harry Hindu
Did you read this :point: [url=https://thephilosohttps://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/comment/566809phyforum.com/discussion/comment/566809]New Caledanian Crow[/url] — TheMadFool
I like to solve these types of problems using a computer programming language. In every language, the variables need to be defined in order to use them. In every logical process the variables used refer to something in the world. — Harry Hindu
Also, if you find that some logical proposition produces a false conclusion, its because so other logical fallacy was made. All logical rules have to be followed - no cherry-picking. — Harry Hindu
Yes. You do not need extra definitions. The original definitions are quite sufficient. Dogs are animals. Cats are animals. Cats are not dogs. Those last three statements are consistent. You need the diagram and the truth table. — Cuthbert
The problem is not in the definitions. The problem is that you say a conclusion follows when it does not follow. — Cuthbert
I can see why Hume questions the existence of self. — Jack Cummins
psychological aspects of identity — Jack Cummins
I think that we define ourselves as human individuals on the basis of past history, but who we are in terms of ego identity and connection with reality is far more complex. — Jack Cummins
My criticism of the rants (those are not reviews) is independent of the books. What she said about logic is stupid, no matter what is in the books. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Then I worked through an introductory book on symbolic logic, and I learned a lot. — TonesInDeepFreeze
But I will say that I just don't know whether I would have done as well with Kalish/Montague if I hadn't previously read that other symbolic logic book that gave me some good chops with symbolization and symbolic deduction — TonesInDeepFreeze
They're not. They reveal fundamental misunderstanding, confusions, and ignorance of the writer. — TonesInDeepFreeze
You just quoted her about the ill-effects of emotion in arguments. Your feelings about the books don't make her arguments about them sound. — TonesInDeepFreeze
You are quoting from someone who is ignorant. — TonesInDeepFreeze
When logic is used in the debates, the debaters might get a false sense of security that they might arrive at true conclusions because they are using logical methods. But in many cases, it is not the case. Because logic can hide the traps. Just guessing :DHow so? — TonesInDeepFreeze
Logic by Wilfrid HodgesWhich books are those? — TonesInDeepFreeze
The logical calculus doesn't permit that inference so your example is irrelevant. — TonesInDeepFreeze
You gave examples of arguments that symbolic logic rules as invalid. That's not a problem for symbolic logic; it's only a problem for you if you think symbolic logic does rule those arguments as valid. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Its a good bet that, if you're not taking a class, then the best way to learn is from a good textbook.
'Logic: Techniques of Formal Reasoning' by Kalish, Montague, and Mar is the best introduction, in my opinion based on having looked at a lot of logic books. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Ranting! Venting! Blowing off steam! Sorry you had to see this! By the way, did I say anything even mildly inappropriate? Apologies if I did. — TheMadFool
I would go with that. :grin:On a more serious note, logic is logic's own worst enemy (it fails its own tests). That's the beauty! — TheMadFool
Cause, or Cause and Effect, is one of Kant's Categories of the Understanding. Kant asserted there were twelve such categories. — charles ferraro
How right you are. The angle makes all the difference. From a certain angle, shit looks like shit, from another angle, shit looks like... :chin: — TheMadFool
Space and Time, the Forms of Sensible Intuition, and the Categories of the Understanding. — charles ferraro
You're comparing letters in the first example — Harry Hindu
comparing categories (animals) to elements of categories (cats and dogs) in the latter. Essentially, a, c and are being defined in the same way as animals and dogs and cats, so the relationship between the letters vs animals and dogs and cats are completely different. — Harry Hindu
The argument invalid. The middle term is not distributed (it should be). That's why you're able to construct a counter-example. — TheMadFool
Indeed. I wouldn't say Feyerband invented post-truth, but his "science fails, therefore God it is" brand of pomo oughtn't to have been difficult to deconstruct. Derrida himself said that deconstruction is not an equaliser. There's a lot more to unpack in a work of theology than in a scientific paper. — Kenosha Kid
Anyway, now we really are derailing the thread. I'm waiting with baited breath to see who Wayfarer and/or 180's seconds will be now that Wayfarer has declined the invitation. — Kenosha Kid
The idea is that by studying a text, we can determine which side of a dichotomy the author favours. This — Kenosha Kid
Sorry to derail the thread, but I'm the sole defender of postmodernism on this forum, gotta put the hours in. :) — Kenosha Kid
Deconstruction is a method of isolating the assumptions and biases of a text. Are you suggesting that we get closer to the truth by neglecting these, or rather that it feels like we do? — Kenosha Kid
If a characteristic of phenomenal objects exhibits ABSOLUTE NECESSITY and STRICT UNIVERSALITY, then that characteristic is transcendental. — charles ferraro
