As I understand it propositional logic is only intelligible insofar as it is translated into some natural language or other. '∃' means 'there exists', ' es existiert' and so on. — Janus
...is not quite right. Hence it doesn't follow that propositional logic isSo propositional logic is always formulated in terms of some natural language. — Janus
.an explication of the logic that underlies the language, — Janus
but with caveats — fdrake
To my eye it would be the explication of the distinction between saying and showing. — Banno
...and what comes next might best be silence. Unless you have something else in mind? — Banno
... if you start asking smaller questions, you will perhaps get better answers.
Answering small questions - that's were you have to do the work. And it is where the consistency and coherence of logic comes into its own."Because God says" will answer any "Why...?" — Banno
...there is an inherent logic in natural language which is formalized as propositional logic. — Janus
It was a move from making shit up to making shit consistent. — Banno
...then you have the difficulty of differentiating analytic philosophy and linguistic philosophy. Noether term has a hard and fast definition.
The linguistic turn was a change in method. If it had a goal at all, it was to elucidate philosophical problems by taking care with the language involved. — Banno
Well, I can't make sense of that. Language is made-up stuff, shared sounds with which we do things.
It follows that anything that was inherent - built-in, intrinsic, essential - to language would also be made up.
It makes sense that we introduced strictures on what sounds did what job. That's what grammar is, the way we choose to put sounds and symbols together. Logic is a form of grammar, a further set of strictures on what we do with words.
So I'll stand by my supposition that language precedes logic.
But then, I'm following a constructivist approach; perhaps you are thinking more in Platonic terms?
It's an interesting topic. — Banno
...sounds chosen to signify things... — Janus
...there is an inherent logic in natural language which is formalized as propositional logic. — Janus
Well, yes, language is that structure. This doesn't support your contention so much as mine: that logic is a development of language....a common structure of experience and thought. — Janus
Beliefs are true or false, but they represent nothing. It is good to be rid of representations, and with them the correspondence theory of truth, for it is thinking that there are representations that engenders thoughts of relativism. — Davidson, 'The Myth of the Subjective'
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