But your point reduces to the tautological: the mind can't operate rationally without operating rationally. No one disagrees with that.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
I am aware of that. The tautology therefore is about law of thought, not about laws of logic, a different concept, thus it does not follow that laws of logic are unbreakable. — Lionino
Yes, it doesn't follow. No one said otherwise. And yes, I was referring to your notion of the laws of thought. I'll say it again:
One can break the laws of thought on pain of being irrational. But you say that the laws of thought are unbreakable. But one can break the laws of thought. So you regroup by saying that one can't break them and be rational. But that is not at issue. My point is that one can break the laws of thought, contrary to your earlier claim.
Moreover, even that point is not required, since we know that people do break laws of thought
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Do I have to repeat my definition, which, if anything, is quite the appropriate definition? — Lionino
Definition of what? Of 'the laws of thought'? Repeat or not repeat whatever you like.
if there is a single law of logic that can be broken, and that law of logic corresponds with a law of thought, then there is a law of thought that can be broken
— TonesInDeepFreeze
If the law of logic is understood as expressing a law of thought — which in modern days that is not how it is understood — Lionino
Where is there a report that modern writers in general believe that laws of logic may not be understood as expressing laws of thought? And what period do you regard as modern?
hence my original comment to Leontiskos —, by definition it can't. If law of logic is understood as how we understand it today, laws of thought do not correspond to laws of logic because, as we have agreed, the latter may not be respected by some system, they may only allude to or be based on laws of thought. — Lionino
I'm uncertain whether I understand you. Certain systems don't respect certain laws of thought. That doesn't entail that laws of thought cannot be broken. Indeed, it evidences that they can.
Also, you say "the latter", which is 'laws of logic'. So 'they' also refers to 'laws of logic'. And you say 'they may only allude to or be based on laws of thought'. So that is saying that laws of logic may only allude to or be based on laws of thought. But that seems the opposite of anything we've agreed on. If the laws of thought require rejecting contradiction, then systems that allow contradiction do not adhere to that law of thought.
I'm not talking about guessing what post was quoted.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
I am. You constantly [emphasis added] mistake what post is being quoted. — Lionino
(1) In one case, I was unclear as to whether you were quoting in agreement with the quoted poster. And I overlooked that your recent lashing out was not directed at me. That is not even remotely
constant (2) In this instance, I've been in exactly the right place about what was posts was referenced.
"Jack is happy" is grammatical even when the speaker misused the word 'happy' while thinking it meant 'doleful'.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
I have refuted that already. Talking of circles. — Lionino
Your replies don't even come close to a refutation.
It's plain as day: One can easily see that "The cat is black" is grammatical, without having to know anything about the person who said it, or even if it was not said by a person but formed randomly by a machine. You've not refuted that. One of your replies is that we assume the speaker knows the meanings of the words. But that is not necessary to see that the sentence is grammatical. We could say, "I have no idea whether the person who wrote "The car engine is noisome" knows that 'noisome' means 'offensive' not 'noisy' but that doesn't matter if all you want to know is whether the sentence is grammatical. I'll happily and without any reservation tell you that is."
/
Oh, and about nitpicking: Your objection to "If ___, then ___" is a doozy!