(p→q)↔(¬p∨¬q) is invalid.So it must be P -> Q = Not P or Not Q — Corvus
No, it's invalid. It can still be true under some interpretation. It can also be false under some other interpretation.P -> Q is FALSE. — Corvus
It's not a proper syllogism, yet you present it in syllogistic form? Make up your mind: is it an inference, or not?The catchphrase "I think therefore I am" of course is not a proper syllogism, and it doesn't have to be, the complete argument is:
Thinking → existing
I think
Therefore I exist — Lionino
Is it a valid inference, on which we must all agree, or is it an intuition, a mere hunch or impression?That every single philosophical argument needs to be put in syllogistic shape is a fantasy. It is more than impressive that cogitō ergo sum, the crowning achievement of the father of modern philosophy, needs to be defended against so many bad arguments in a philosophy forum. — Lionino
All your friends need do is deny the right of the disjunct - which they have done.(I think, therefore I exist) or (I don't think, therefore I don't exist)
In symbolic classic logic, the contents don't matter. It works purely on the format.
So if you say,
P-> Q
Not P
Then it must be Not Q
There is no way Not P, and it is still Q. — Corvus
2.0231 The substance of the world can only determine a form, and not any material properties. For it is only by means of propositions that material properties are represented—only by the configuration of objects that they are produced.
...all muddle... — schopenhauer1
The power of the factual is immense and prevents us from taking on other perspectives. — Wolfgang
Probability, not Certainty — Gnomon
Good for you. If something is known, then one can conclude that it is true.To say you know something implies a commitment to something being true, and for me that implies certainty — Lionino
In Chess, it is true that the bishop stays on it's own colour.One can hardly discern whether there is something "true" about the game they just made up to communicate or whether it is a useful fiction. — Lionino
That is to say, it would be a matter of empirical investigation to find out, both what the constituents of a thought are and how they are related to the ‘objects’ occurring in facts, that is to say, to the objects designated by the ‘names’ in language. — Summary, p. 28
That this is fantastically untrue is shewn by any serious investigation into epistemology, such as Wittgenstein made in Philosophical Investigations. But it is fair to say that at the time when he wrote the Tractatus, Wittgenstein pretended that epistemology had nothing to do with the foundations of logic and the theory of meaning, with which he was concerned. The passage about the ‘elucidation’ of names, where he says that one must be ‘acquainted’ with their objects, gives him the lie. — op cit.
First off, what you referred to was not about simple objects: — Fooloso4
That sentence appears to me to be about objects.Does Anscombe mention a single simple object? The claim that language demands it is not the same as actually identifying either a simple object or a simple name. — Fooloso4
Animals know things, but what kinds of beliefs do they have? Certainly not propositional. — RogueAI
You are only as certain as how much you can convince yourself of certainty. — Beverley
You mean using logic?twisting language — Beverley
We can start from wherever we want. — Lionino
Again, why are you so adamant about this?Certainty is absurd! — Chet Hawkins
Because you seemed to me not to be differentiating between atomic objects and elementary propositions.Did I say or imply otherwise? Why bring this up? — Fooloso4
And you know this to be so?Knowledge is delusional because it implies knowing which is impossible. — Chet Hawkins
This is said without irony?Exactly. Further showing how nothing is set in stone. — Lionino
Can one call oneself an existentialist without irony? — Tom Storm
Justified true belief?You have to explain what exactly you meant by know to have a good definition. — Abhiram
Whatever "it" is. Our knowledge is not limited to subjective experience. For example, that you answered my post demonstrates that you know you are a participant in a social organisation that spans the globe...Subjective experience is there we know it. — Abhiram
Can you prove there can’t be a perfect definition of existentialism? — Rob J Kennedy
We cannot know about anything for sure. Definitely not 100%. Only thing we can be sure of is the subjective experience we have. — Abhiram
you have to at least conceptually recognize both phenomenal awareness and object awareness. — hypericin
Does Anscombe mention a single simple object? — Fooloso4
1. Fact can either be the case or not be the case. — 013zen
In the event that it is the case, a certain set of atomic facts obtain. In the event of a possible fact not being the case, a certain set of atomic facts do not obtain.
