Say the subject reports believing some business is located in certain location relative to their home and they draw a map of how to get there. They believe the locations are correct.... — MindForged
Now, the reason I said "sort of" is because this isn't necessarily a physical contradiction because this is about ones knowledge — MindForged
That's not really explaining what you mean though. Is conceivability defined in terms of consistency? If so, it's question begging for the LNC. If conceivability is defined in terms of mental pictures, that's not going to work since lots of actual states of affairs cannot be pictured and mathematics has it's own notion of conceivability (basically deduction). — MindForged
Or are you asking the switch to be an inconsistent physical object? — MindForged
Is it right that the idea is that the contradiction lies in what the person who drew the maps believes? That is, he believes both A and Not A. If so, I don't think the example really works. The content of my beliefs is contradictory, but there is still no actual state of affairs that is incoherent, is there? — PossibleAaran
Mental maps (and beliefs) are abstract representations of the world. We know that representations can be mistaken or inconsistent. But the maps are not the territory. — Andrew M
As far as I can see, there is no actual contradictory state of affairs in this example. There is the computer and it's program. There are various maps which are drawn differently, and there is the person who drew the maps. None of this is contradictory, is it? — PossibleAaran
The content of my beliefs is contradictory, but there is still no actual state of affairs that is incoherent, is there? Let's try to make this clear. If you have found a case (instantiated in the real world) where the law of non-contradiction is false, then there must be some proposition you can state, about the world, which is both contradictory and true. What would that be? — PossibleAaran
What's wrong with the mental pictures definition? You say lots of states of affairs cannot be pictured. Could you give an example? I should note that the picturing need not be absolutely precise. I can't really mentally picture what the atoms which compose my laptop are like, but I can at least picture billiard balls interacting in certain ways, and perhaps picture billiard balls that have smaller parts that produce certain effects. I can picture that much, and I know that the atoms in my laptop are a bit like that. — PossibleAaran
As to the point about mathematics, I don't see why it is relevant. Let mathematicians define conceivability however they like for their purposes - I have no objection. But that they define it one way does not show that there is anything wrong with defining it another way for some other purpose than mathematics. — PossibleAaran
Yes, that's the scenario that is unintelligible. — Andrew M
Logic defines relations of elements, not elements themselves. — Towers
The validity of a logical argument refers to whether or not the conclusion follows logically from the premises, i.e., whether it is possible to deduce the conclusion from the premises and the allowable syllogisms of the logical system being used. If it is possible to do so, the argument is said to be valid; otherwise it is invalid. (Wolfram mathworld)
Whose logic? Suppose my logic tells me differently than yours, thus leaving us in a situation where we both claim logic but do not agree? — Carmaris19
If logic establishes validity shouldn't our logic align as say our senses of sight and touch often do when we agree on the color and firmness of a rock? It seems that disagreements on objective reality presupposes invalid logic on one end or the other unless truth and validity are meaningless. — Carmaris19
States if affairs or physical objects cannot be either coherent or incoherent. — SophistiCat
What kinds of objects are we considering (only mathematical objects or do we include physical objects as well)?
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[Priest's] proposal seems to be committed to ‘inconsistent objects’ in the physical world: the objects to which our inconsistent but true physical theories refer.
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Whether the world is indeed ‘inconsistent’ — assuming there is a sensible formulation of this claim — is something we would rather be agnostic about. Just as empiricists (such as van Fraassen [van Fraassen, 1980]) are agnostic about the existence of unobservable
entities in science, we are agnostic about the existence of true contradictions in nature. — Paraconsistent Logics and Paraconsistency - da Costa, Krause, Bueno
What separates logic from opinion? (Hint validity) — Carmaris19
All this runs deeper than casual thinking can get to. We may well "know" that 1+1=2 from observation. But that leaves a problem with "know" that Hume excavated. That is, we observe it.We know 1+1=2 because of all the situations we have observed where this is true; — Carmaris19
In consideration of the above, no. And by the way, a "logic that is based on empiricism" is an oxymoron: it is just no logic at all. Empiricism is just that, empiricism. To call it logic is akin to creationists calling creationism a science. Attempting with a word to claim assets and a status to which it is not entitled.but logic that is based on empiricism and must be shown to be empirically true before it can be considered as logically sound AND true in practice. — Carmaris19
The switch being on and off is an example of an inconsistent state of affairs. The SEP entry for States of Affairs gives the example of Paul's having squared the circle.
Also paraconsistent logicians accept or at least consider the existence of inconsistent physical objects. — Andrew M
See, we can say what it means for a sentence (for example) to be inconsistent. I don't think it is possible to say what it means for an object or a state of affairs to be inconsistent - without looping back to the language that we use to describe that object/state of affairs. So yes, you can sort of attribute inconsistency to things, but that attribution will be parasitic upon language, thought, reason. — SophistiCat
Of course, things and talk of things are hard to separate anyway, except that if we are realist to any extent, we accept that there is a one-to-many relationship between them. That is, there is one thing, but our relationship to it is through thinking/talking about it, and there can be more than one way to do the latter - including dialetheic ways. — SophistiCat
One way or another, they can end up talking about the superposition state using a deliberately inconsistent model. Does it make the subject of their description itself inconsistent? Yes, as long as they are talking about it in that particular way, and with the understanding that the inconsistency awes itself to that particular conceptualization. — SophistiCat
The person's set of beliefs are, and beliefs are part of the mind. This would make minds the sort of objects that can have contradictory properties, no? — MindForged
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