(2) If some observation corresponds to some Bible-specific proposition, then it is evidence that Christianity is true. — Hallucinogen
You have a whole lot of work to do on - at least - defining your terms and how they relate to each other. — tim wood
(1eg) If a theory explains an observation, then the theory is evidenced. — Hallucinogen
Well if "God did it" explains O relative to other members of T, it would seem "God did it" is evidenced relative to the others. — Hallucinogen
What is that flying across the sky leaving behind it a trail? It must be Icarus on his way. Yes, my theory is evidenced! :roll: — jgill
I have another theory: — "unenlightened did it". — unenlightened
validity of the argument. — Hallucinogen
Changing the semantics doesn't change the validity of the argument. — Hallucinogen
If a theory explains an observation, then the theory is evidenced. — Hallucinogen
But since unenlightened is not God, there is a contradiction. — unenlightened
If everything is evidence that God did it, then everything is evidence that unenlightened did it. — unenlightened
Validity doesn't have much of a relationship with truth. — AmadeusD
Validity is the relationship a true premise has with a true conclusion — Hallucinogen
That's soundness — AmadeusD
Validity is mere formal agreement between premises and conclusion. — AmadeusD
If your premises are empirically wrong, the argument is unsound — AmadeusD
You didn't say unenlightened isn't God, before. — Hallucinogen
Soundness is a relationship between true premises and a valid conclusion. — AmadeusD
A true premise with a false conclusion is not sound — AmadeusD
Do not attempt to argue with Me, worm. Cower in fear of My wrath. — unenlightened
But since unenlightened is not God — unenlightened
Because it isn't valid. — Hallucinogen
False.
Your premises can be entirely false — AmadeusD
A true premise with a false conclusion is not sound — AmadeusD
Soundness: An argument is sound if it meets these two criteria: (1) It is valid. (2) Its premises are true. — colorado.edu
The addition of the premises being true creates soundness. — AmadeusD
Validity doesn't have much of a relationship with truth. — AmadeusD
where one has false premises validly leading to a "supported" conclusion. — Hallucinogen
If your premises are empirically wrong, the argument is unsound, but can be considered valid(in the case that the premises, however false, would support the conclusion as written/formulated). — AmadeusD
It seems you're claiming that you cannot have a valid argument without true premises. — AmadeusD
For an argument to be sound, it has to be valid already. A requirement for soundness is the truth of the premises, whereas validity is to do with how the rules of logic are applied. — Hallucinogen
What I am saying is that sound arguments are a subset of valid arguments. — Hallucinogen
A true premise with a false conclusion is not sound — AmadeusD
Because it isn't valid. — Hallucinogen
Your premises can be entirely false — AmadeusD
If your premises are empirically wrong, the argument is unsound, but can be considered valid — AmadeusD
P1: Hitler was German
P2: Hitler carried out his acts in service of Germany
C: Hitler was a German dictator.
This is false. He was an Austrian dictator of Germany.
But the above is a valid argument. In the world where Hitler was German, it holds. However, P1 is untrue, therefore it is not a Sound argument.
Another example:
P1: It is raining today where i am
P2: I am outside, unshaded
C: I am wet with rain. — AmadeusD
If a discussion revolves around a piece of information that is easily understandable and available online, both sides lost the debate before it even started. — Lionino
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