Wasn't he criticizing you in that post? — Terrapin Station
You can just use 1) "if something is a raven then it is black" and the logically equivalent 2) "if something is not black then it is not a raven". The paradox still holds. Evidence for 2) is evidence for 1). — Michael
Fuckin ell Micheal. You can if you want, but if you don't say anything that populates the world, you ain't saying anything about the world, and no evidence from the world applies. And then the statements are equivalent andthere is no evidence for any of it and thus no paradox, because it is just a declaration about language.
A raven is evidence that there are ravens. If there aren't ravens, I really don't care what you say about them or what evidence you produce. — unenlightened
So evidence from the world certain does apply to if/then claims. — Michael
I don't understand this. If I were to say "if you are from Wales then you are a women" then you can provide evidence (or even proof) against this claim by showing me that you're from Wales but not a woman. So evidence from the world certain does apply to if/then claims. — Michael
Only if I exist. Are you claiming I exist? Then there can be evidence. — unenlightened
And that's the point. According to the paradox, the existence of green apples is evidence for the claim "if something isn't black then it isn't a raven", and because of contraposition is also evidence for the claim "if something is a raven then it is black". — Michael
Two statements have the same truth value in every model iff they mean the same thing. — Michael
If we go by the definition here, "Evidence, broadly construed, is anything presented in support of an assertion. This support may be strong or weak. The strongest type of evidence is that which provides direct proof of the truth of an assertion. At the other extreme is evidence that is merely consistent with an assertion but does not rule out other, contradictory assertions, as in circumstantial evidence." — Michael
Here's a little example. Let's say that 2+2=4. There is a logical equivalence between (2+2) and (4). Now we can have a look at what each of those means. I assume that (2+2) means that one group of two is added to another group of two. I also assume that (4) means one group of four. I see a difference between the meaning of (2+2) and the meaning of (4). You have applied an unjustified principle, to say that because the two are equivalent they have the same meaning. — Metaphysician Undercover
All you are saying is that logical equivalence is not "the same" as numerical equivalence. You have just provided evidence for my argument, that "equivalent" does not mean 'the same". — Metaphysician Undercover
Two statements have the same truth value in every model iff they mean the same thing. — Michael
The vast majority of people have a relevance requirement for evidence. The purported evidence needs to have something to do with what it's evidence for. — Terrapin Station
The vast majority of people have a relevance requirement for evidence. The purported evidence needs to have something to do with what it's evidence for. — Terrapin Station
The existence of green apples is relevant — Michael
The purported evidence needs to have something to do with what it's evidence for. That's an explication of the first sentence. — Terrapin Station
Yes, and the existence of green apples does have something to do with the claim "if something is not black then it is not a raven" — Michael
Actually, what we are looking at is two statements which have the same truth value within the same model. — Metaphysician Undercover
the existence of green apples does have something to do with the claim — Michael
Not with a claim per a logic game. — Terrapin Station
It needs to have something to do with ravens--the creatures. — Terrapin Station
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