A reductio is not truth-functional. — Leontiskos
Given a proof of B and ~B from A as assumption, we may derive ~A as conclusion — Lemmon
Again, no.(It would seem that you are wrong in claiming that classical logic treats contradictions as false. — Leontiskos
I gather you worked through this? Nice. — Banno
Elvis is not a man – ¬A
Elvis is a man does not imply that Elvis is both mortal and immortal – ¬(A → (B and ¬B))
Therefore Elvis is a man – A
¬A, ¬(A → (B∧ ¬B)) entails A. That doesn't make sense — Lionino
So ¬(A → (B∧ ¬B)) is the same as (¬A) → (B∧ ¬B), which may be read as "Not-A implies a contradiction", it can't read as "A does not imply a contradiction". — Lionino
Elvis is not a man – ¬A
Elvis is not a man implies that Elvis is both mortal and immortal – ¬(A → (B and ¬B))
Therefore Elvis is a man – A
¬A, ¬(A → (B∧ ¬B)) entails A, from contradiction everything follows. — Lionino
Elvis is not a man – ¬A
Elvis is a man does not imply that Elvis is both mortal and immortal – (A → ¬(B and ¬B))
These two do not entail that Elvis is a man. — Lionino
Some A's have a plurality of implications. If A implies both, B and C, then "A implies B" and "A implies not B" is better understood as "A implies B and C". C is not B. — creativesoul
It depends upon the values given to the variables. — creativesoul
So a+b = b+a regardless of what number you stick in to the formula, and a^(a→b)⊢b regardless of what statement you put in, too. Or so it is supposed to go. — Banno
[Tones] is a pill and iinundates me with an absurd number of replies (15 in just the last 24 hours). Presumably he is the only one you believe has "explained this at length"? — Leontiskos
Presumably he is the only one you [Banno] believehas "explained this at length"?— Leontiskos
I read his responses to Lionino, but many of those posts are just completely blank. He deletes what he wrote. — Leontiskos
Tones gave a translation of the latter as:
"It is not the case that if A then B & ~B
implies
A"
I still can't make sense of it. — Lionino
What is the definition 'analogical equivocity'?
— TonesInDeepFreeze
It is the kind of equivocity present in analogical predication, where a middle term is not univocal (i.e. it is strictly speaking equivocal) but there is an analogical relation between the different senses. This is the basis for the most straightforward kind of metabasis eis allo genos. The two different senses of falsity alluded to above are an example of two senses with an analogical relation. — 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
— javra
How does your newly provided caveat (1) added to your previously made statement (2) not fully equate semantically to what I initially explicitly defined the law of noncontradiction to be in full? — javra
If (2) and the now explicitly stated (1) do fully equate semantically to what I initially stated explicitly, then you have your answer. “Yes.”
A and notA do not occur — javra
Is A a statement?
— TonesInDeepFreeze
obviously not when taken in proper given context. ("if a statement both does and does not occur [...]" ???) — javra
if not [a statement], then what is A
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Anything whatsoever that can be the object of one’s awareness. For example, be this object of awareness mental (such as the concept of “rock”), physical (such as a rock), or otherwise conceived as a universal (were such to be real) that is neither specific to one’s mind or to physical reality (such as the quantities specified by “1” and “0”, as these can for example describe the number of rocks present or else addressed).
and what does it mean for it to occur?
— TonesInDeepFreeze
In all cases, it minimally means for it to be that logical identity, A=A, which one is at least momentarily aware of. Ranging from anything one might specify when saying, "it occurred to me that [...]" to anything that occurs physically which one is in any way aware of. — javra
get the sense you might now ask further trivial questions devoid of any context regarding why they might be asked. — javra
one can’t pretend to represent a contradiction in the form of a proposition and then apply the LEM — Leontiskos
"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
An alternative way of putting it would be 'if water then oxygen'. 'If water then no oxygen' contradicts 'if water then oxygen' according to the logic of everyday parlance. — Janus
My point earlier with taking an alternative interpretation, that is with the 'notB' not being interpreted as 'not oxygen' but rather as signifying something other than oxygen, say hydrogen, then the two statements would not contradict one another. — Janus
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