I meant 'non-contradiction', not 'contradiction'. I meant:
Do you take
"It is not the case that both water can be green and water can be not-green."
as an instance of the law of non-contradiction? — javra
"water can be green and water can be non-green (e.g., blue) at the same time and in the same respect [with "in the same respect" to include its spacial location]" — javra
if A and notA do not occur — javra
Sure, but that's not really what the example is there to assert, as is clear from the rest of the paragraph. They mentioned replacing the fact about dogs 2+2 = 4 in the next line. It's "if a statement is true, then that statement is implied by any statement whatever," which is straightforwardly counter intuitive. — Count Timothy von Icarus
"It is not the case that both water can be green and water can be not-green" is an instance of the law of non-contradiction.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
That looks accurate to me. — Lionino
My question is, as we can see from the truth table I posted, (a → (b ∧ ¬b)) is False only when A is True. When we try to convert that to natural language, the result can be something that is evidently untrue — Lionino
just because something does not imply a contradiction, it doesn't mean it is true). — Lionino
j is not the case that if A then B & ~B
implies
A.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
does not enlighten me. — Lionino
You talked about interpretations/models, and my truth table shows all of them — given LEM. — Lionino
Modern Symbolic Logic", it doesn't have a well-defined meaning since it refers to a plurality of logics — sime
"if a statement is true, then that statement is implied by any statement whatever," which is straightforwardly counter intuitive.
— Count Timothy von Icarus
That's true of classical logic — sime
given LEM — Lionino
But, as my second phrase in this post, I got confused as to whether ¬(a→(b∧¬b)) means a variable that is in contradiction with (a→(b∧¬b)) or simply that (a→(b∧¬b)) is False. — Lionino
¬(a→(b∧¬b)) is only ever True (meaning A does not imply a contradiction) when A is True. But I think it might be we are putting the horse before the cart. It is not that ¬(a→(b∧¬b)) being True makes A True, but that, due to the definition of material implication, ¬(a→(b∧¬b)) can only be True if A is true. — Lionino
When are we supposed to reduce a contradiction to its functional truth value, and when are we supposed to let it remain in its proposition form? The mind can conceive of [claims] like (b∧¬b) and ¬(b∧¬b) in these two different ways, the manner in which we conceive of them results in different logical outcomes, and symbolic logic provides no way of adjudicating how the [claims] are to be conceived in any one situation. — Leontiskos
I understand the proviso "in same time in all respects". But that proviso may be given more generally, upfront about all the statements under consideration:
(1) Caveat: We are considering only statements that are definite enough that they are unambiguous as to such things as time, aspects, etc. So we're covered in that regard.
Then we have:
(2) Law: For all statements A, it is not the case that both A and not-A.
Would (1) and (2) suffice for you as the law of non-contradiction? — TonesInDeepFreeze
if A and notA do not occur — javra
Is A a statement? — TonesInDeepFreeze
If not, then what is A — TonesInDeepFreeze
and what does it mean for it to occur? — TonesInDeepFreeze
This seems to be the source of your difficulties.A contradiction is a contradiction. It is neither true nor false. It is the basis for both truth and falsity. — Leontiskos
The very proposition of "there both a) is a self and b) is no self" has (a) and (b) addressing the exact same thing - irrespective of how the term "self" might be defined or understood as a concept, the exact same identity is addressed — javra
"the presence of water implies the presences of oxygen"
is not an "if then" statement, since 'the presence of water' and 'the presence of oxygen' are noun phrases, not propositions. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Each of these systems sets out different ways of dealing with truth values. How the truth value of a contradiction is treated depends on which of these systems is in play.
Asking, as you do, how to treat the truth value of a contradiction apart from the system that sets out how a truth value is to be dealt with makes little sense. It does not make much sense to speak of "the notion of contradiction in its entirety". — Banno
If this is the nub then the problem is, as I said earlier, that truth-functional logic does not give us any instruction for how to handle contradictions. — Leontiskos
As has been explained, in classical logic a contradiction is false. — Banno
I'm puzzling over what this might be.the notion of contradiction in its entirety — Leontiskos
As has been explained at length, in classical propositional logic contradictions are false.pray tell how a contradiction is to be dealt with in classical propositional logic? — Leontiskos
Another example of your practice of misattributing stuff to your interlocutors - as you did with . What I said is that the disagreement here is as to which system is in play. Hence there is no absolute answer as to which view is "right"....you seem to be implying that, according to the logic, one person is right and one person is wrong when they disagree about whether a given instance of (b∧¬b) should be treated as a proposition/variable or as a simple truth value. — Leontiskos
As has been explained at length, in classical propositional logic contradictions are false. — Banno
As has been explained, in classical logic a contradiction is false. — Banno
Do (A implies B) and (A implies not B) contradict each other?
Please give your reasoning, if you choose to answer, for why you think they do, or don't, contradict each other. And if you think they do contradict each other, does that mean they can't both be true at the same time? — flannel jesus
Your loss.I've been ignoring Tones... — Leontiskos
Then the thread is in erorr. (p ^ ~p) is false in classical propositional logic.I think the thread shows that this is not true. — Leontiskos
Not at all. A contradiction in first order predicate logic is an expression of the form (φ ^ ~φ). It is not an expression of the form ~φ. The lack of specificity here is your attempt to make use of a notion of contradiction that is not found in classical propositional logic.The problem here is that your answer lacks specificity — Leontiskos
How is it that something and its negation can both be false? — Leontiskos
Nowhere in that post do you affirm (B∧¬B).Whether or not we affirm the negation of the consequent... — Leontiskos
A implies B and C. C is not B. A implies both, B and not B. No contradiction. — creativesoul
Your loss. — Banno
Then the thread is in erorr. (p ^ ~p) is false in classical propositional logic. — Banno
Whether or not we affirm the negation of the consequent... — Leontiskos
Nowhere in that post do you affirm (B∧¬B). — Banno
You think the two propositions logically imply ~A? It seems rather that what they imply is that A cannot be asserted. — Leontiskos
You could also put this a different way and say that while the propositions ((A→(B∧¬B)) and (B∧¬B) have truth tables, they have no meaning. They are not logically coherent in a way that goes beyond mere symbol manipulation. We have no idea what (B∧¬B) could ever be expected to mean. We just think of it, and reify it as, "false" - a kind of falsity incarnate.*
* A parallel equivocation occurs here on 'false' and 'absurd' or 'contradictory'. Usually when we say 'false' we mean, "It could be true but it's not." In this case it could never be true. It is the opposite of a tautology—an absurdity or a contradiction. — Leontiskos
Ah, so it's an esoteric mystery. :wink:This answer proves that you do not understand the questions that are being asked. If one wants to understand what is being discussed here they will be required to set aside their ready-made answers. — Leontiskos
The consequent is (B∧¬B)Nowhere in that post do you affirm (B∧¬B).
— Banno
I never said I did. Read again what you responded to. " — Leontiskos
Indeed, while your second example is a case of modus tollens, the first is not. — Banno
1. A→(B∧¬B) assumption
2. A assumption
3. B∧¬B 1,2, conditional proof
4. ~A 2, 3 reductio — Banno
Don't put the blame for your poor notation on to me. — Banno
A reductio is as much a proof in classical propositional logic as is modus tollens.a reductio is an indirect proof which is not valid in the same way that direct proofs are. — Leontiskos
Simply because I matched your example, which hasIn your conclusion you reject (2) instead of (1). Why do you do that? — Leontiskos
and not ~A⊢A→(B∧¬B).A→(B∧¬B)
∴ ¬A — Leontiskos
Simply because I matched your example — Banno
The reductio shows that A→(B∧¬B)⊢~A. As ↪hypericin pointed out. — Banno
As I noted earlier in response to Tones' reductio, a reductio is an indirect proof which is not valid in the same way that direct proofs are. You can see this by examining your conclusion. In your conclusion you rejected assumption (2) instead of assumption (1). Why did you do that? In fact it was mere whim on your part, and that is the weakness of a reductio.*
* A reductio requires special background conditions. In this case it would require the background condition that (1) is more plausible than (2). — Leontiskos
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.