an argument with two conditional premises should not be able to draw a simple or singular conclusion (because there is no simple claim among the premises). — Leontiskos
And to read Flannel Jesus' posts is to realize that he did not intend the OP in any special sense. I see no evidence that he was specifically speaking about material implication. — Leontiskos
Tones even mistakes natural language for his own system — Leontiskos
and normatively interprets natural language in terms of his system — Leontiskos
I have no issue with being corrected or told new things. — Philosophim
he jumped into a conversation I was having with another poster without context — Philosophim
and when I asked him to clarify his issue he came across as dismissive. — Philosophim
I encourage you not to do the same and jump into another conversation between two people. — Philosophim
If the long reply made you feel better, that's fine. — Philosophim
You can't argue against how you come across to other people on a forum. — Philosophim
Hopefully we'll have a better encounter in another thread. — Philosophim
Good luck in explaining your side, I do agree with it. — Philosophim
you're running into a mismatch between most people's general sense of seeing -> as a strict conditional. — Philosophim
in your field or life 'material conditional' is a common phrase, but for most people who use logic, this is never introduced. For them, it's almost always seen as a strict conditional. Remember that this forum is populated by all types of people, and most of them are not logicians or philosophers themselves. — Philosophim
Explaining and contrasting a strict conditional vs a material conditional should make the issue clear for most people. — Philosophim
I'll retract it then, as an alternative to arguing the point. Or if you consider the second clause as adding fuel to the fire, I'll retract it. — fishfry
Is 1 + 1 = 2 a logical truth? — javi2541997
1 + 1 = 2 is a 'definition'.
2 — javi2541997
First, take out 'would' since subjunctives unnecessarily complicate.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
It's like talking to a computer. "Get rid of that natural language, you're confusing our processes!" — Leontiskos
You're still involved in ambiguity. In order to know what Sue denied we must know what Bob affirmed. As noted in my original post, your interpretation will involve Sue in the implausible claims that attend the material logic of ~(A → B), such as the claim that A is true and B is false. Sue is obviously not claiming that (e.g. that lizards are purple). The negation (and contradictory) of Bob's assertion is not ~(A → B), it is, "Supposing A, B would not follow." — Leontiskos
Here's some help for you from the dictionary:
Merriam-Webster - Contradictory
(Adjective): involving, causing, or constituting a contradiction
| contradictory statements
| The witnesses gave contradictory accounts of the accident.
(Noun): a proposition so related to another that if either of the two is true the other is false and if either is false the other must be true — Leontiskos
The reason we keep material implication is because we like truth functionality. — Leontiskos
They imply ~A.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Then give your proof. — Leontiskos
Here is the alternative notion of contradiction that you are overlooking:
“opposite assertions cannot be true at the same time” (Metaph IV 6 1011b13–20)
— Aristotle on Non-contradiction | SEP — Leontiskos
I already corrected your misinterpretation — Leontiskos
I'm glad you finally figured this out — Leontiskos
To help you, Janus' point about natural language is something like this:
Supposing A, would B follow?
Bob: Yes
Sue: No
Now Sue has contradicted Bob. The question is, "What has Sue claimed?" — Leontiskos
Again, a contradiction is a statement and its negation. If there is a contradiction then you could show that both a statement and its negation are implied.
Again:
"if lizards are purple, then they would be smarter" and "if lizards are purple, then they would not be smarter" is not a contradiction.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
But the difficulties of material implication do not go away here. You are thinking of negation in terms of symbolic logic, in which case the contradictory proposition equates to, "Lizards are purple and they are not smarter." — Leontiskos
You don't even understand what is being said. — Leontiskos
I was there giving an answer to the question at hand. — Leontiskos
I give up. Go read Lionino's first post on the first page. — Leontiskos
I don't think that's a coincidence at all. — flannel jesus
The question at hand is, "What is the contradiction of 'If lizards were purple then they would be smarter'?" — Leontiskos
You are thinking of negation in terms of symbolic logic, in which case the contradictory proposition could be, "Lizards are purple and they are not smarter." — Leontiskos
The negation of a material conditional will be different from the negation of an if-then statement in natural language — Leontiskos
But the difficulties of material implication do not go away here. — Leontiskos
You are thinking of negation in terms of symbolic logic — Leontiskos
in which case the contradictory proposition could be, "Lizards are purple and they are not smarter." — Leontiskos
Yet in natural language when we contradict or negate such a claim, we are in fact saying, "If lizards were purple, they would not be smarter." — Leontiskos
The negation must depend on the sense of the proposition, and in actuality the sense of real life propositions is never the sense given by material implication. — Leontiskos
unsound — Janus
both of the conditional statements are untrue, because being or not being smarter has no logical connection with being purple — Janus
I could say that the two statements are nonsensical because the antecedent has no relevance to the consequent. However, I cannot but see them as contradictory. — Janus
What about these two statements: 'if I was more educated in logic, I would be able to see that those two statements are contradictory" and "if I was more educated in logic I would not be able to see that those two statements are contradictory"—do those two statements contradict one another? — Janus
Or what about 'if I was more educated in logic, I would be able to see that those two statements are contradictory" and "if I was more educated in logic I would be able to see that those two statements are not contradictory"? — Janus
Do I understand what 'contradictory' means? I think so. — Janus
taken informally as statements, they contradict one another. — Janus
you don't see those two sentences as contradicting one another [?] — Janus
Why is it incorrect informally? — Janus
relevance is another way of saying logical connection — Janus
I asked you if any were nonsensical, I didn't say they were. — Janus
In informal language if the antecendent has no relevance to the consequent then I would say that counts as nonsensicality. — Janus
I was not thinking in terms of formal logic — Janus
If the two sentences were 'if monkeys had wings, then they could fly to the moon' and 'if monkeys had wings, they could not fly to the moon' the two sentences contradict one another regardless of whether it is true that monkeys have wings or whether it is true that if they had wings they either could or could not fly to the moon. — Janus
but assuming that there would be some logical connection between the conditional and the implications (and why would we even bother thinking about statements where there is no such logical connection) then the two statements do contradict one another. — Janus
Are any of those useful logic paths nonsensical? Genuine question... — Janus
'=' is interpreted:
For any terms 'T' and 'S'
T = S
is true
if and only if
the denotation of 'T' is the denotation of 'S'. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Does (A implies B) mean that 'if A then B'? Does (A implies notB) mean that 'if A then not B'? If the answer is 'yes' to both, then they contradict one another. — Janus
if you want to make a point, link or note your point — Philosophim
"Look at a textbook" is dismissive and means you're removing yourself from the conversation. — Philosophim
Then give your proof.
— Leontiskos
Are you serious? You don't know how to prove it yourself?
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Not exactly the model of a sage and wise poster. — Philosophim
You came on here with a chip on your shoulder to everyone. — Philosophim
I gave you a chance to have a good conversation — Philosophim
Now if you had an issue with my use of -> or wanted to teach me the difference between a modal and material implication, something I did not know before today — Philosophim
citing a wiki post — Philosophim
we have wasted time back and forth — Philosophim
Share it and teach. — Philosophim
If he is using the term of implication to mean, "could lead to" — Philosophim
I did not catch that 'material' conditional was anything different from the modal operator. — Philosophim
Your attitude is hostile and condescending — Philosophim
Don't be a troll. — Philosophim
without backing up your claim clearly — Philosophim
You spoke so tersely and dismissively — Philosophim
you misunderstood what I was stating earlier. I'm replying to someone specifically in which I covered both types of meanings of the words 'imply', as the OP did not specify what they meant. One where "Imply" means "necessary" and one where imply means "Could lead to". — Philosophim
and "imply ¬A" as the proposition being True means A is False
— Lionino
Yes, this was my concern. Tones requires the assumption, as I thought he must. — Leontiskos
"imply ¬A" as the proposition — Leontiskos
and "imply ¬A" as the proposition being True means A is False
— Lionino
Yes, this was my concern. Tones requires the assumption, as I thought he must. — Leontiskos