It is exact in the a priori intensional sense of being defined as an equation or algorithm with instantly recognizable form. — sime
a sequence of rational numbers — sime
pi as a constant is ambiguous — sime
Brouwer's philosophy of Intuitionism, in which ' x1,x2,... ' is interpreted as referring to partially defined finite sequence of unstated finite length, rather than as referring to an exactly defined sequence of actually infinite length. In other words, x1,x2,... is interpreted as referring to a potentially infinite sequence whose length is unbounded a priori, but whose length is eventually finitely bounded a posteriori at some unknown future date. — sime
It's simply impossible! — Agent Smith
I was trying to see if the two statements could be used to form a classic syllogism — Agent Smith
:roll: — jgill
there's no need to rack our brains on such a simple matter. — Agent Smith
1. Some Ayes are Bees.
2. All Seas are Bees.
No conclusion follows. — Agent Smith
If some ayes are bees, and seas are bees, then some ayes are sees. Unless not all bees are sees, which isn't given. — John McMannis
This goes to the existential problem — tim wood
"The presupposition [...] contradictory relation." — tim wood
house rules — tim wood
If you have a dollar in your pants pocket, do you (not) have also 32 cents?
— tim wood
No, you don't. A dollar is a dollar and cents are cents. Also, you cannot use some vending, gambling etc. machines if you don't have the exact amount of cents. — Alkis Piskas
it is true because its inference is valid — Alkis Piskas
A) Some animals are cats: True, since mammals are animals (based on the first premise) and cats are mammals
— Alkis Piskas
You can infer this adding additional information, but you cannot from the premises given validly conclude it.
— tim wood
You are right that you have to infer it, i.e. we don't know that directly, but it is true because its inference is valid, — Alkis Piskas
Mammals are a subset of animals. Cats are a subset of mammals. That is, cats are a subset of a subset of animals. — Alkis Piskas
It is true that some animals are cats. But it is not entailed by your premises.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
If it is true, well, it is True! That's what I said! — Alkis Piskas
Saying that "some cats are mammals" suggests that there are some cats that are not mammals. — Alkis Piskas
(A) is true, but it is not entailed by your premises.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Yes, you have already said that! — Alkis Piskas
B) Some cats have four legs: False, since we know that "All cats have four legs" (and not only some) — Alkis Piskas
"No animals" is ambiguous — Alkis Piskas
Drawn from what? The premises. And what is to be drawn from the premises? A conclusion. — tim wood
you have made it clear that your methods are not those of the problem. — tim wood
The question was "which conclusion can be drawn?" The question was not "which conclusion can be drawn by the method of Aristotelian syllogisms?". — TonesInDeepFreeze
This is by all appearances an Aristotelian logic game. You appear to admit as much: — tim wood
You also more-or-less plainly imply that the law of undistributed middle does not apply. — tim wood
Now it is for you to demonstrate how it does not apply in any of your standard logics - without adducing premises or information not already provided to make it seem as if it does not. — tim wood
Or in short, how can you say anything categorical about something that has not already been categorically defined - without somehow adding the missing qualifications? — tim wood
So, in Boolean or first-order or whatever order logic are undistributed middles no longer fallacious? — tim wood
The problem, noted above, is called undistributed middle. — tim wood
Some animals are cats: True — Alkis Piskas
Some cats are mammals: False, — Alkis Piskas
No cats are animals: "No cats" is ambiguous — Alkis Piskas
there are two true statements, (A) and (D). — Alkis Piskas
what, if any, house rules may be in effect. — tim wood
Aristotelian logic, on the other hand, may be not so useful in some modern applications, but it is not wrong. — tim wood
only in outdated, Aristotelian categories it's "E" — DavidJohnson
You get your D, but only on expanding the terms of the problem. — tim wood
Else we willy-nilly prove the existence of God, Zeus, unicorns, and the two-horned rhinoceros sleeping in my bed. — tim wood
it asks for a conclusion, not an inference — tim wood
If, for example, there were As that at the same time are not Bs, then D follows. But that hypothetical is not given. — tim wood
the middle term is not distributed, which means no valid conclusion can be drawn. — tim wood
This follows iff there is an A that is not a B. — tim wood
1. Some Ayes are Seas (true, but a premise)
2. Some Ayes are not Seas (undecidable)
3. All Ayes are Seas (undecidable)
4. No Ayes are Seas (false) — Agent Smith
If the proposition, "No Ayes are Seas" were added, would D still be valid? — DavidJohnson
D looks tempting, but depends on the implicit added proposition that if some As are Bs, then some As are not Bs — tim wood
Between 0.1 and 0.99999.... you use all numbers of N — AgentTangarine
1,2,3,....9999999.... — AgentTangarine
Cannot N be mapped onto 0.1-1?
— AgentTangarine
Do you mean to suggest that there is a 1-1 function from N onto 0? — TonesInDeepFreeze
