Given C, a contradiction, the expression C => P is true. That is because C is false, and whenever the antecedent is false, the implication is true - them's the rules. But it is an elementary and serious error to suppose this shows that P is true. For P to be true, C must first be affirmed. That is, C ^ (C => P) => P, C being true, affirms P. And this is exactly - or should be - what Tones said. — tim wood
A contradiction doesn't make a false statement true. No one disagrees with that. And it is not the principle of explosion. — TonesInDeepFreeze
It was claimed in this thread that most philosophers believe it is not the case that there are sentences that are true on the basis of their meaning.
What is the basis for that claim? — TonesInDeepFreeze
The principle of entailment goes very far back in the history of logic. It is in model theory that the principle is given mathematical exactness. The model theoretic version adheres to the general principle: A set of premises entails a conclusion if and only if there are no circumstances in which the premises are all true but the conclusion is false. — TonesInDeepFreeze
And model theory adheres to the ancient notion of entailment: A set of premises entails a conclusion if and only if there are no circumstances in which all the premises are true but the conclusion is false. — TonesInDeepFreeze
If D is a contradiction, then M might be true or false. From the mere fact that D is logically impossible we do NOT infer that M is true. But the conditional D -> M is not just true, it is logically true. THAT is the principle of explosion and it does NOT imply that M is true. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Getting back to the poster slipping from the context of contradiction to falsehood: Yes, all contradictions are falsehoods. But not all falsehoods are contradictions. The point here is that mere falsehood is not what's involved in the principle of explosion. — TonesInDeepFreeze
It's not a matter of the conclusion being false but rather that the poster previously tried to slip the discussion from the inconsistency of the premise to the falsehood of the premise. — TonesInDeepFreeze
If C is any contradiction and Q is any sentence, then:
C |- Q
That is a basic result in sentential logic, known to anyone who has studied the subject. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Let CNC stand for "The cat is not a cat," intended here as a false proposition.
Let MGC stand for, "The moon is made of green cheese," also a false proposition.
Let K stand for the implication, (CNC => MGC).
According to the rules, K is true. Period. — tim wood
That is a basic result in sentential logic, known to anyone who has studied the subject. — TonesInDeepFreeze
The poster cites "semantic connection". That is not a defined term. However, the semantics are clear, as I have mentioned over and over but the poster refuses to recognize: — TonesInDeepFreeze
The poster asks a question anew. He should read the post to which he is replying. — TonesInDeepFreeze
It looks very much like a case where how you're using the words, PL, is not how the literature is using them. And in that regard your ideas - as criticisms of the literature - are off target. — fdrake
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