If we know that we have 12 eggs where some are white and some are brown, then the more white ones we find, the greater the probability is that we'll come across a brown one. — Terrapin Station
So why start with "Let's assume that we have 12 eggs and that they can be either white or brown"? Why would we even say that unless we have some reason to believe that they can be either white or brown? — Terrapin Station
Because it's just an example to make sense of the maths. — Michael
The math about being white or brown would make no sense if we have no reason to believe that the eggs can be white or brown. The math wouldn't mean anything in that case. — Terrapin Station
There is a xn chance of the hypothesis "all Ys are Z" being true, — Michael
Given the logical equivalence, any evidence in support of (2) is also evidence in support of (1). — Michael
They're logically equivalent because of the law of contraposition, and evidence for one is evidence for the other because they're logically equivalent. — Michael
We know that (1) and (2) do not say the same thing.. — Metaphysician Undercover
They do not say the same thing, they say an equivalent thing. Therefore what they say is equivalent, not the same. Likewise the table and the chair are both "one" object. They are equivalent, as "one", but not the same — Metaphysician Undercover
Two sentences can be equivalent in a sense much stronger than that of material equivalence; they may be equivalent in meaning as well as having the same truth value. If they do have the same meaning, any proposition that incorporates one of them can just as well incorporate the other; there will not be—there cannot be—any case in which one of these statements is true while the other is false. Statements that are equivalent in this very strong sense are called logically equivalent.
To be "equivalent" logically, does not mean the same thing as to be the "same". This is a mistaken assumption. — Metaphysician Undercover
We're not talking about proof. We're talking about evidence. Not all evidence is proof — Michael
Find replace all instances of ''proof'' with ''evidence''. My post still makes sense.
A single or even many, excepting ALL, cannot provide evidence (your preferred term) for a UNIVERSAL statement. — TheMadFool
Two statements that are logically equivalent mean the same thing... — Michael
We don't need to come up with a number. It just needs to not be zero (which we know it isn't if we find one example of a Y that is a Z). The math then follows. xn - 1 × 1 is greater than (or equal to) xn. — Michael
I'm not saying that the math doesn't work as a formalism. But the formalism has no significance devoid of context, and devoid of an actual number in this case. It's fine as a game we can play with math, but that's all it is as you're stating it. — Terrapin Station
Two statements that are logically equivalent mean the same thing, and so have the same truth value in every model. — Michael
You might say that two statements which are logically equivalent have the same truth value. But that is my point, they are equivalent according to this system of "value", and this does not imply that they "mean the same thing". — Metaphysician Undercover
The maths shows that the probability of our hypothesis being true increases with each successful observation. — Michael
Two statements have the same truth value in every model iff they mean the same thing. — Michael
If you know you have a finite number of items, yes, but depending on how many items there are, it's not good evidence of the hypothesis being likely, with the normal connotations that "likely" has. It's not even good evidence of the hypothesis being likely if there are only two items to check. — Terrapin Station
They only mean the same thing when individuals assign the same meaning to them (keeping in mind that it's not going to literally be the same), and the truth value hinges on how the individual in question assesses the relationship of the proposition to what they consider the apt "truthmaker." — Terrapin Station
We know that (1) and (2) do not say the same thing..
— Metaphysician Undercover
We do know that they say the same thing. That's what it means for them to be logically equivalent, and their logical equivalence is entailed by the law of contraposition. — Michael
Under this interpretation, we have:
"All ravens are black" = "there are ravens, & there are no non-black ravens."
The contrapositive, though becomes:
"There are non-black things, & none of them are ravens."
These are not logically equivalent because They populate different regions of the Venn diagram. — unenlightened
And we can certainly talk about situations where A and B mean the same thing to S.and its meaning is such that if A is logically equivalent to B then A and B mean the same thing. — Michael
And the law of contraposition is equally clear that if P then Q is logically equivalent to if not P then not Q.
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