and "imply ¬A" as the proposition being True means A is False
— Lionino
Yes, this was my concern. Tones requires the assumption, as I thought he must. — Leontiskos
↪Philosophim Wiki might suffice to show you the difference between material implication and strict implication. That might be what you have in mind.
Tones is correct. — Banno
It is not trolling to point out an incorrect statement, and it not trolling nor handwaving to suggest that one can look in textbooks to see that the statement is incorrect. — TonesInDeepFreeze
If he is using the term of implication to mean, "could lead to" — Philosophim
I did not catch that 'material' conditional was anything different from the modal operator. — Philosophim
Your attitude is hostile and condescending — Philosophim
Don't be a troll. — Philosophim
without backing up your claim clearly — Philosophim
You spoke so tersely and dismissively — Philosophim
you misunderstood what I was stating earlier. I'm replying to someone specifically in which I covered both types of meanings of the words 'imply', as the OP did not specify what they meant. One where "Imply" means "necessary" and one where imply means "Could lead to". — Philosophim
...but we can also usefalse propositions in good reasoning. Since a false conclusion cannot be logically proved from true premises, we can know that if the conclusion is false then one of the premises must also be false, in a logically valid argument. A logically valid argument is one in which the conclusion necessarily follows from its premises. In a logically valid argument, if the premises are true, then the conclusion must be true. In an invalid argument this is not so. "All men are mortal, and Socrates is a man, therefore Socrates is mortal" is a valid argument. "Dogs have four legs, and Lassie has four legs, therefore Lassie is a dog" is not a valid argument. The conclusion ("Lassie is a dog") may be true, but it has not been proved by this argument. It does not "follow" from the premises.
Now in Aristotelian logic, a true conclusion logically follows from, or is proved by, or is "implied" by, or is validly inferred from, only some premises and not others. The above argument about Lassie is not a valid argument according to Aristotelian logic. Its premises do not prove its conclusion. And common sense, or our innate logical sense, agrees. However, modern symbolic logic disagrees. One of its principles is that "if a statement is true, then that statement is implied by any statement whatever." Since it is true that Lassie is a dog, "dogs have four legs" implies that Lassie is a dog. In fact, "dogs do not have four legs" also implies that Lassie is a dog! Even false statements, even statements that are self-contradictory, like "Grass is not grass," validly imply any true conclusion in symbolic logic. And a second strange principle is that "if a statement is false, then it implies any statement whatever." "Dogs do not have four legs" implies that Lassie is a dog, and also that Lassie is not a dog, and that 2 plus 2 are 4, and that 2 plus 2 are not 4.
This principle is often called "the paradox of material implication." Ironically, "material implication" means exactly the opposite of what it seems to mean. It means that the matter, or content, of a statement is totally irrelevant to its logically implying or being implied by other statements. Common sense says that Lassie being a dog or not being a dog has nothing to do with 2+2 being 4 or not being 4, but that Lassie being a collie and collies being dogs does have something to do with Lassie being a dog. But not in the new logic, which departs from common sense here by totally sundering the rules for logical implication from the matter, or content, of the propositions involved. Thus, the paradox ought to be called "the paradox of wort-material implication. The paradox can be seen in the following imaginary conversation:
Logician: So, class, you see, if you begin with a false premise, anything follows.
Student: I just can't understand that.
Logician: Are you sure you don't understand that?
Student: If I understand that, I'm a monkey's uncle.
Logician: My point exactly. (Snickers.)
Student: What's so funny?
Logician: You just can't understand that.
The relationship between a premise and a conclusion is called "implication," and the process of reasoning from the premise to the conclusion is called "inference" In symbolic logic, the relation of implication is called "a tnith-functional connective," which means that the only factor that makes the inference valid or invalid, the only thing that makes it true or false to say that the premise or premises validly imply the conclusion, is not at all dependent on the content or matter of any of those propositions, but only whether the premise or premises are true or false and whether the conclusion is true or false.
...Logicians have an answer to the above charge, and the answer is perfectly tight and logically consistent. That is part of the problem! Consistency is not enough. Logic should be not just a mathematically consistent system but a human instrument for understanding reality, for dealing with real people and things and real arguments about the real world. That is the basic assumption of
the old logic.
Peter Kreeft & Trent Dougherty - Socratic Logic
I gave you the best advice anyone could ever give you regarding this subject: Look at a textbook. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Your attitude is hostile and condescending
— Philosophim
Actually, you insulted me. I hadn't written anything "hostile" or "condescending" but then insultingly you wrote:
Don't be a troll.
— Philosophim — TonesInDeepFreeze
Then give your proof.
— Leontiskos
Are you serious? You don't know how to prove it yourself? — TonesInDeepFreeze
You misunderstand. You said that '->' means 'necessarily leads to'. And that is false. — TonesInDeepFreeze
if you want to make a point, link or note your point — Philosophim
"Look at a textbook" is dismissive and means you're removing yourself from the conversation. — Philosophim
Then give your proof.
— Leontiskos
Are you serious? You don't know how to prove it yourself?
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Not exactly the model of a sage and wise poster. — Philosophim
You came on here with a chip on your shoulder to everyone. — Philosophim
I gave you a chance to have a good conversation — Philosophim
Now if you had an issue with my use of -> or wanted to teach me the difference between a modal and material implication, something I did not know before today — Philosophim
citing a wiki post — Philosophim
we have wasted time back and forth — Philosophim
Share it and teach. — Philosophim
Does (A implies B) mean that 'if A then B'? Does (A implies notB) mean that 'if A then not B'? If the answer is 'yes' to both, then they contradict one another. — Janus
But they aren't perfect translations because all sorts of shit that sounds very dumb in natural language flies in symbolic logic. E.g. "if Trump won the 2020 election then we would have colonized Mars by now."
Anything follows from a false antecedent, so anything would be "true" following the claim that Trump won the 2020 election, since he didn't. — Count Timothy von Icarus
The original question regarded '->', which ordinarily is taken as the material conditional. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Do (A implies B) and (A implies notB) contradict each other? — flannel jesus
Notice that "If snow is green then Emmanuel Macron is an American" and "If snow is green then Emmanuel Macron is not an American" is not of that form and together they don't imply the contradiction "Emmanuel Macron is an American" and "Emmanuel Macron is not an American". They only imply that contraction along with the statement "Snow is green". — TonesInDeepFreeze
For example, the computer you're using now is based on logic paths in which "if then" is the material conditional. — TonesInDeepFreeze
The way you would usually use it in any sort natural language statement would be to say: "Look, A implies both B and not-B, so clearly A cannot be true." You don't have a contradiction if you reject A, only if you affirm it. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I was not thinking in terms of formal logic — Janus
If the two sentences were 'if monkeys had wings, then they could fly to the moon' and 'if monkeys had wings, they could not fly to the moon' the two sentences contradict one another regardless of whether it is true that monkeys have wings or whether it is true that if they had wings they either could or could not fly to the moon. — Janus
but assuming that there would be some logical connection between the conditional and the implications (and why would we even bother thinking about statements where there is no such logical connection) then the two statements do contradict one another. — Janus
Are any of those useful logic paths nonsensical? Genuine question... — Janus
That's incorrect, formally or informally. I explained why it's not correct. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I sense that it is not logical connection you have in mind, but rather, what is called in logic, 'relevance'. — TonesInDeepFreeze
How are they nonsensical? — TonesInDeepFreeze
Why is it incorrect informally? — Janus
relevance is another way of saying logical connection — Janus
I asked you if any were nonsensical, I didn't say they were. — Janus
In informal language if the antecendent has no relevance to the consequent then I would say that counts as nonsensicality. — Janus
you don't see those two sentences as contradicting one another [?] — Janus
Because even informally, the statements don't entail a both statement and its negation. — TonesInDeepFreeze
"if lizards are purple, then they would be smarter" and "if lizards are purple, then they would not be smarter" is not a contradiction. — TonesInDeepFreeze
"if lizards are purple, then they would be smarter" and "if lizards are purple, then they would not be smarter" and "lizards are purple" does imply a contradiction. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I'm not sure, but maybe you want to check whether you are conflating "not intuitive" with "contradictory". — TonesInDeepFreeze
Again, a contradiction is a statement and its negation. If there is a contradiction then you could show that both a statement and its negation are implied.
Again:
"if lizards are purple, then they would be smarter" and "if lizards are purple, then they would not be smarter" is not a contradiction. — TonesInDeepFreeze
taken informally as statements, they contradict one another. — Janus
Right, I do have some familiarity with logic gates. Are any of those useful logic paths nonsensical? Genuine question... — Janus
From falsehood, anything follows. Have you ever heard of this? — flannel jesus
unsound — Janus
both of the conditional statements are untrue, because being or not being smarter has no logical connection with being purple — Janus
I could say that the two statements are nonsensical because the antecedent has no relevance to the consequent. However, I cannot but see them as contradictory. — Janus
What about these two statements: 'if I was more educated in logic, I would be able to see that those two statements are contradictory" and "if I was more educated in logic I would not be able to see that those two statements are contradictory"—do those two statements contradict one another? — Janus
Or what about 'if I was more educated in logic, I would be able to see that those two statements are contradictory" and "if I was more educated in logic I would be able to see that those two statements are not contradictory"? — Janus
Do I understand what 'contradictory' means? I think so. — Janus
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