But for the everyday use of logic just to schematize and clarify arguments, you get a lot more mileage out of de Morgan's laws, contrapositives, a solid understanding of quantifiers, and such. — Srap Tasmaner
Actually, I have personally gained a lot from study of mathematical logic, in use outside of mathematics, in practical applications, in organizing ideas, and in appreciation of rigor and clarity in practical applications.
If one happens to be interested in the subject of symbolic logic, then it is an eminently natural and wise question to ask: Does this symbolic calculus prove all and only the valid formulas? I wondered about that and had no idea that mathematicians had answered the question with proofs about it. When I saw the proofs, I found the intellectual curiosity acted on, the intellectual honesty and the intellectual creativity to be tremendously inspiring. If you don't, then so be it, but also, so what.
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Some mathematicians have a solid understanding of quantification naturally without studying symbolic logic. But personally, I found that studying symbolic logic brought me up to speed with what is natural for others.
And, for example, consider the most economically important question in mathematics: P v NP with its economic implications thus its million dollar prize. Work on that presupposes mathematical logic. If one is not interested, then fine, but what is the point then in carping about it?
But what do you mean by 'abusive'?
— TonesInDeepFreeze
The basic idea is "formally correct but misleading or akin to sophistry". Akin to sophistry. — Srap Tasmaner
You used the pronoun 'it' right after the argument of the first post was mentioned. So I didn't know whether you meant 'it' to refer to indeed its antecedent. Now I see that you didn't.
Anyway, the counterargument to the original argument is not misleading or like sophistry.
People worry over the sense in which the conclusion of a deductive argument is "contained" in the premises ― here it is one of the premises. — Srap Tasmaner
It is equivalent with one of the premises.
The original post asked about a symbolic argument. The matter was not whether such things are useful in your life. At least speaking for myself, I have no interest in convincing you that you should regard such matters as useful to you. But that does not vitiate my interest in technical matters in formal logic, even if for the mere mathematical/intellectual pleasure, and especially as that mathematical/intellectual pleasure is attached to a field of study that provides core context for the mathematics for the sciences, engineering, and computing, and especially since I also enjoy philosophical aspects of the subject and having a solid technical founding greatly contributes to both appreciation and understanding of the philosophical discussions.
In what sense is the relationship of A and ~A revealed or clarified? It may be modus ponens in form, but hardly in spirit — Srap Tasmaner
The argument was:
A -> ~A
A
therefore ~A
There was discussion that this is an example of aspects of negation and contradiction. My point was that we can see that the argument is valid in another, quite immediate way, viz. that it is staring us right in the face as modus ponens.
I am not declaring any profundity. It's just a correct observation, with a nice reminder, and pertinent to the context of the discussion.
And if we step back and look at the offending premise, we get to ~A by noting that A→~A is materially equivalent to ~A v ~A. Now what kind of disjunction is that? It's a well-formed-formula ― no one can deny that ― but it's hardly what we usually have in mind as a disjunction. It's "heads I win, tails you lose." That's abusive. — Srap Tasmaner
Another poster took that path. It's correct and pertinent too to the formal matter at hand. To call it "abusive" is to abuse the word 'abusive'.
There is, in this case, a veneer of logic over what could scarcely be considered rational argumentation. If this appearance of rationality serves any purpose, it must be to mislead, hence abusive, eristic, sophistical, non-cooperative. ― Again, I am only talking about how logic is used as an aid to ordinary philosophizing, not what people get up to in a logic lab. — Srap Tasmaner
The purpose is to be clear about the formal logic. That is a good purpose. One my wish not to talk about formal logic, or to disagree with it, but it is a good purpose to at least be correct and clear about what does happen in formal logic, especially when the first post regards a symbolic argument.
And "logic lab". The original post regarded a symbolic argument. So what, you gonna sue a bunch of people for taking it in that very context? And, by the way, "the logic lab" is part of philosophy too, as formal logic and symbolic logic are regular undergraduate philosophy courses, and sometimes even set theory and mathematical logic too.
And it is not a "veneer".
You might choose to heap on more opprobrium against posters who are interested in the subject enough to strive to be correct about it, but you've not at all successfully impeached them, not even touched them.