and when the OP is in the Logic sub-forum it makes sense to default to trained logic — Moliere
And to read Flannel Jesus' posts is to realize that he did not intend the OP in any special sense. I see no evidence that he was specifically speaking about material implication. — Leontiskos
Formal logic is parasitic on natural logic, and "logic" does not mean "formal logic," or some system of formal logic. — Leontiskos
Can anyone think up a real world example where you would point out that A implies both B and not-B except for saying something along the lines of:
"A implies B and not-B, therefore clearly not-A." — Count Timothy von Icarus
The way you would usually use it in any sort natural language statement would be to say: "Look, A implies both B and not-B, so clearly A cannot be true." You don't have a contradiction if you reject A, only if you affirm it.
This is a fairly common sort of argument. Something like: "if everything Tucker Carlson says about Joe Biden is true then it implies that Joe Biden is both demented/mentally incompetent and a criminal mastermind running a crime family (i.e., incompetent and competent, not-B and B) therefore he must be wrong somewhere." — Count Timothy von Icarus
...and "imply ¬A" as [meaning] the proposition being True means A is False. — Lionino
Yeah, looking at OP at least, I can see how there's ambiguity there: whether material implication, or some other meaning, was meant isn't specified in the OP and so whatever meaning was meant there's still ambiguity there (which may explain some of the divergence here that I'm surprised to find) — Moliere
The part where "A" is used as a variable is what made me jump to propositional logic. — Moliere
Your points about the difference between two versions of contradiction was interesting and I was thinking about it then got sidetracked in reading the back-and-forth. — Moliere
Your points about the difference between two versions of contradiction was interesting and I was thinking about it then got sidetracked in reading the back-and-forth. — Moliere
6 pages too many on this thread. — Lionino
((a→b)∧(a→¬b))↔¬a is valid — Lionino
* A parallel equivocation occurs here on 'false' and 'absurd' or 'contradictory'. Usually when we say 'false' we mean, "It could be true but it's not." In this case it could never be true. It is the opposite of a tautology—an absurdity or a contradiction. — Leontiskos
Let A = "Unenlightened's testimony is unreliable"
Let B = "Unenlightened tells the truth"
not B ="Unenlightened does not tell the truth"
↪Count Timothy von Icarus might note that ↪unenlightened's testimony is reliable
...Logicians have an answer to the above charge, and the answer is perfectly tight and logically consistent. That is part of the problem! Consistency is not enough. Logic should be not just a mathematically consistent system but a human instrument for understanding reality, for dealing with real people and things and real arguments about the real world. That is the basic assumption of
the old logic.
...The conclusion ("Lassie is a dog") may be true, but it has not been proved by this argument. It does not "follow" from the premises.
Now in Aristotelian logic, a true conclusion logically follows from, or is proved by, or is "implied" by, or is validly inferred from, only some premises and not others. The above argument about Lassie is not a valid argument according to Aristotelian logic. Its premises do not prove its conclusion. And common sense, or our innate logical sense, agrees. However, modern symbolic logic disagrees. One of its principles is that "if a statement is true, then that statement is implied by any statement whatever."
This principle is often called "the paradox of material implication." Ironically, "material implication" means exactly the opposite of what it seems to mean. It means that the matter, or content, of a statement is totally irrelevant to its logically implying or being implied by other statements.
Logician: So, class, you see, if you begin with a false premise, anything follows.
Student: I just can't understand that.
Logician: Are you sure you don't understand that?
Student: If I understand that, I'm a monkey's uncle.
Logician: My point exactly. (Snickers.)
Student: What's so funny?
Logician: You just can't understand that.
The relationship between a premise and a conclusion is called "implication," and the process of reasoning from the premise to the conclusion is called "inference" In symbolic logic, the relation of implication is called "a tnith-functional connective," which means that the only factor that makes the inference valid or invalid, the only thing that makes it true or false to say that the premise or premises validly imply the conclusion, is not at all dependent on the content or matter of any of those propositions, but only whether the premise or premises are true or false and whether the conclusion is true or false.
I agree that material implication has problems, but if you want a tidy, "algorithmic" system, then these sorts of problems are inevitable.
You might be interested in relevance logic, which tries to deal with the paradoxes of material implication: https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/logic-relevance/ — Count Timothy von Icarus
There is a section in Tractatus where Wittgenstein declares that belief in a causal nexus is a "superstition" and holds up logical implication as sort of the "real deal." I think this is absolutely backwards. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Or one that isn't horrifically complex. I actually think that is what gets people more than the "paradoxes of implication." People can learn that sort of thing quite easily. What seems more confusing is the way in which fairly straightforward natural language arguments can end up requiring a dazzling amount of complexity to model. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Do (A implies B) and (A implies notB) contradict each other? — flannel jesus
I woke in the middle of the night and realized there is an alternative interpretation of the above in natural language. I remain convinced that reading the two propositions as "B follows from A" and "B does not follow from A" means that they contradict one another. — Janus
Yet in natural language when we contradict or negate such a claim, we are in fact saying, "If lizards were purple, they would not be smarter." We say, "No, they would not (be smarter in that case)." The negation must depend on the sense of the proposition, and in actuality the sense of real life propositions is never the sense given by material implication. — Leontiskos
Janus' point about natural language is something like this:
Supposing A, would B follow?
Bob: Yes
Sue: No
Now Sue has contradicted Bob. The question is, "What has Sue claimed?" — Leontiskos
That's my kindergarten contribution for what it's worth. — Janus
However, reading (A implies notB) as "something other than B (caveat: also) follows from A". would be consistent with "B follows from A", because it would not deny that B also follows from A. — Janus
You could also put this a different way and say that while the propositions ((A→(B∧¬B)) and (B∧¬B) have truth tables, they have no meaning. They are not logically coherent in a way that goes beyond mere symbol manipulation. We have no idea what (B∧¬B) could ever be expected to mean. We just think of it, and reify it as, "false" - a kind of falsity incarnate.* — Leontiskos
A = a cat is sleeping outstretched on the threshold of the entry door to a house.
B = the cat is in the house
notB = the cat is not in the house
In this example, how does A not imply both B and notB in equal measure? — javra
As I so far see things, this addresses the principle of the excluded middle. But the fault would then not be with this principle of itself but, instead, with faulty conceptualizations regarding the collectively exhaustive possibilities in respect to what happens to in fact be the actual state of affairs. — javra
This same type of reasoning can then be further deemed applicable to well enough known statements such as “neither is there a self nor is there not a self”. — javra
This latter proposition would be contradictory only were both the proposition’s clauses to simultaneously occur in the exact same respect. Otherwise, no contradiction is entailed by the affirmation. — javra
Asking this thinking I (as a novice when it comes to formal modern logics) might have something to learn from any corrections to the just articulated. — javra
It has been some time since I studied formal logic, but I would want to say something along the lines of this, "A proposition containing (p∧¬p) is not well formed." — Leontiskos
Yes, this is similar to ↪Count Timothy von Icarus
's vampire argument. — Leontiskos
I think issues like the cat are simply mistranslations and over simplifications. The statement should be something like:
The cat is sitting across the threshold of the house, therefore some of the cat is in the house and some of the cat is in the house. — Count Timothy von Icarus
A = a cat is sleeping outstretched on the threshold of the entry door to a house. — javra
Do (A entails B) and (A entails notB) contradict each other? — bongo fury
I think your basic intuition is correct. It resists the crucial methodological error of "trusting the logic machine to the extent that we have no way of knowing when it is working and when it is not" (↪Leontiskos). We need to be able and willing to question the logic tools that we have built. If the tools do not fit reality, that's a problem with the tools, not with reality (↪Janus). — Leontiskos
However, reading (A implies notB) as "something other than B (caveat: also) follows from A". would be consistent with "B follows from A", because it would not deny that B also follows from A.
— Janus
Yeah that's a good explanation for why it intuitively makes sense that they're a contradiction. — flannel jesus
Consider this as an intuitive explanation for why they aren't a contradiction:
A implies B can be rephrased as (not A or B)
A implies not B can be rephrased as (not A or not B)
Do you think (not A or B) and (not A or not B) contradict?
Only if (A entails B) and (A entails notB) occur in the exact same respect (and, obviously, at the same time), which I find is most often the case. — javra
If the long reply made you feel better, that's fine. — Philosophim
You can't argue against how you come across to other people on a forum. — Philosophim
Hopefully we'll have a better encounter in another thread. — Philosophim
Good luck in explaining your side, I do agree with it. — Philosophim
you're running into a mismatch between most people's general sense of seeing -> as a strict conditional. — Philosophim
in your field or life 'material conditional' is a common phrase, but for most people who use logic, this is never introduced. For them, it's almost always seen as a strict conditional. Remember that this forum is populated by all types of people, and most of them are not logicians or philosophers themselves. — Philosophim
Explaining and contrasting a strict conditional vs a material conditional should make the issue clear for most people. — Philosophim
I have no issue with being corrected or told new things. — Philosophim
he jumped into a conversation I was having with another poster without context — Philosophim
and when I asked him to clarify his issue he came across as dismissive. — Philosophim
I encourage you not to do the same and jump into another conversation between two people. — Philosophim
Is it not a given that we should understand A and B to refer to the same things in both? — Janus
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