You regard 1 as the background assumption, whereas I regard (1 v 2 v 3) as the background assumption — Andrew M
As I interpret the situation, ~R -> A is not counterintuitive when derived in the appropriate context. Given the polls, a person has good reason to believe a Republican has won (or will win). But Carter might still have won, despite their good reason, since their good reason is not sufficient for truth. — Andrew M
given their newly acquired knowledge, if Reagan didn't win, then Anderson did. — Andrew M
1. Either Shakespeare or Hobbes wrote Hamlet.
2. If either Shakespeare or Hobbes wrote Hamlet, then if Shakespeare didn't do it, Hobbes did.
3. Therefore, if Shakespeare didn't write Hamlet, Hobbes did it.
Since Shakespeare did write Hamlet, the first premise is true. The second premise is also true, since starting with a set of possible authors limited to just Shakespeare and Hobbes and eliminating one of them leaves only the other. However, the conclusion may seem false since ruling out Shakespeare as the author of Hamlet would leave numerous possible candidates, many of them more plausible alternatives than Hobbes. — Modus Ponens - Alleged cases of failure - Wikipedia
'incomplete' is not part of my analysis. — TonesInDeepFreeze
But if Reagan did not win, it would have been Carter. And it is this that is in contrast wth the conclusion of the MP. So isn't your explanation incomplete?My analysis doesn't need to say anything about Carter. — TonesInDeepFreeze
if Reagan did not win, it would have been Carter — Banno
n the absence of the article — Banno
Vann McGee claims that modus ponens "is not strictly valid" in an article from 1985
Opinion polls taken just before the1980 election showed the Republican Ronald Reagan decisively ahead of the Democrat Jimmy Carter,
with the other Republican in the race, John Anderson, a distant third. Those apprised of the poll results believed,
with good reason:
[1] If a Republican wins the election, then if it's not Reagan who wins it will be Anderson.
[2] A Republican will win the election.
Yet they did not have reason to believe
[3] If it's not Reagan who wins, it will be Anderson
↪TonesInDeepFreeze ↪Andrew M
Seems we have agreement that modus ponens is not invalidated by the argument in the OP; that the premises are true, the argument valid and the conclusion true, but incomplete. — Banno
And we can bring out even more clearly what is wrong with these supposed counterexamples by considering the following modification of (1) - (3):
(7) If a Republican wins, then if he is not Reagan he will be Anderson;
(8) A Republican will win;
(9) If he is not Reagan, he will be Anderson.
The antecedent of (7) restricts the possibilities for the interpretation of the pronoun in its consequent. The second assumption (8) does the same job for the conclusion (9), and it would be a transparent mistake to try to interpret 'he' in some other way, in an attempt to show that (7)-(9) is invalid. McGee would make a mistake of this type if he thought of (8) as a relatively long-lasting mental state of justified belief outside of the context of this inference. He would not then see (8) as an assumption in an inference, determining in that context which proposition is expressed by (9).
An inference should be defined in terms of a relationship between assumptions and a conclusion, as is standard in logic. We should remember that the assumptions can restrict the relevant set of possibilities and so affect the propositions expressed under them, just as the antecedents can affect the propositions expressed by the consequents of conditionals. We must therefore be careful about the propositions expressed in inferences, particularly ones containing conditionals, if we wish to question their validity. — Assumptions and the Supposed Counterexamples to Modus Ponens, D. E. Over, Analysis, 1987
mental state — Assumptions and the Supposed Counterexamples to Modus Ponens, D. E. Over, Analysis, 1987
This has been a waste of my time and the time of people reading my posts. — TonesInDeepFreeze
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