Let me try this: is gold a yellow metal? Is gold any other color? Assuming the answer to these are yes and no respectively, then it seems right to say that if there is gold, then it is a metal and it is yellow, and, if it is either not metal or not yellow, then it is not gold. — tim wood
No, the structure was all F that E can be predicated of are E all F that G can be predicated of G, — MindForged
You like the word really - what is really going on; what the statement really tells us. I'm not so keen. I still do not see how your post explains anything. — Banno
But deductive validity requires that the form must guarantee deriving only true conclusions from true premises. — aletheist
"Gold is a yellow metal" or "a bachelor is an unmarried man" — tim wood
What? The problem with that is the argument is just the form, not the truth value of the two premises. All bouncy orange balls are bouncy, all bouncy orange balls are bouncy, but that does not imply "some orange are bouncy", it doesn't follow. Of course the sentence doesn't make sense but the relevant logical issue is just the use of an invalid argument form. — MindForged
I don't see the conceptual issue here, these seem like perfectly comprehensible properties some object might have even if they do not in fact have them — MindForged
So with the Darapti argument (All As are Bs; All As are Cs; Therefore some Bs are Cs) we go from true premises to a false conclusion. — MindForged
It would not be fallacious for me to argue that I should buy pizza because that’s what the guests want. — TheHedoMinimalist
Similarly, it would not be fallacious to argue that if most people prefer existence over non-existence then we should consider this fact when thinking about the morality of reproduction — TheHedoMinimalist
Valid argument: Most guests at your party want to have pizza for dinner. This fact is one objective fact about the overall preferences of your guests that should be taken into consideration — TheHedoMinimalist
If nothing is what it is, or can be anything until it is observed. — Rank Amateur
I am looking outside the logic — MindForged
The philosophic implication of such a world is all problems then become metaphysical - since all physical constants are only valid in the space time plane we are aware of. — Rank Amateur
Quantum entanglement as I understand it has been experimentally proven — Rank Amateur
The fact that there is one sort of reality we know about (the material world) does not exclude the possibility of alternative forms of reality. We are missing information in the real world and it must be somewhere. If we can't find it in the real world, it must be elsewhere. So a non-material world makes sense. — Devans99
There is masses of experimental evidence for the speed of light and for quantum entanglement; — Devans99
FTL travel is not possible because of spacetime — Devans99
oh I’m so sorry for thinking the words you say mean the words you say. — khaled
The non-material substrate could be arranged differently so the entangled particles remain co-located in the substrate. Or FTL communication is possible in the substrate. — Devans99
Exactly why tolerent people as defined can't defend themselves from Intolerant people — khaled
It is inherently illogical for a deity to exist. — NKBJ
So what if there's two eye witnesses? Or three? Or one hundred? — NKBJ
ok cool so since you can't force your beliefs on others that is identical to not being able to defend yourself is it not? — khaled
expressing your opinion is fine but trying to force it on someone else is not. Because that would mean you don't tolerate their beliefs and want to change them — khaled
not it wouldn't make sense to defend tolerance if you're pro tolerance because that would mean you're not tolerant towards the intolerant which makes YOU intolerant. — khaled
lol, islamic scripture says there would be a heavenly wine that you can drink that makes you feel awesome without all the negative aspects of drunkenness. — Mr Phil O'Sophy
