MT can be derived from MP and contraposition — Lionino
didn't really talk about proving MT at any point, so I don't know why you are asking that. — Lionino
I didn't suppose ¬P. — Lionino
I know that S follows from the axioms of the theory. Not an assumption.
Conclusion: P. — Lionino
So, what is a "direct proof"? I gather you think using MT is direct, but RAA isn't? WHat's the distinction here? — Banno
Modus tollens requires no "and-elimination" step. Is that a good way to put it in your language? — Leontiskos
One is a statement in the meta-language and the other in the object language. They are different levels of statement. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Assuming contraposition and MP is the same as assuming MT. — Lionino
meta-language — Leontiskos
1. (φ^~φ) means explosion
2. (φ^~φ) means reductio-rejecton
3. (φ^~φ) means false — Leontiskos
This sounds like the "Scandal of Deduction," and it actually holds not just for syllogisms but for all deterministic computation and deduction. From an information theoretic perspective, because the results/outputs of computation and deduction always occur with a probability equal to 100% it follows that they are not informative. Everything contained in the conclusion must be contained in the premise; we learn nothing from deduction. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Every time we make an inference on the basis of a contradiction a metabasis eis allo genos occurs (i.e. the sphere of discourse shifts in such a way that the demonstrative validity of the inference is precluded). — Leontiskos
One is a statement in the meta-language and the other in the object language. They are different levels of statement. — TonesInDeepFreeze
It seems plausible that:
(φ^~φ) takes on the meaning of <explosion> as the antecedent of a modus ponens
(φ^~φ) takes on the meaning of <reductio-rejecton> as the penultimate step of a reductio
(φ^~φ) takes on the meaning of <false> as the consequent of a modus tollens
Something that I read recently, very interesting, and I can't remember where, on the topic of logic, is that syllogisms can be said to be question begging (this is a point that has been made by philosophers in the past).
"All men are mortal; Socrates is a man; therefore, Socrates is mortal" is of no value, since we could not know that the premise, "All men are mortal" is true unless we already knew that Socrates is mortal. So we learn nothing from the syllogism. — Lionino
I know what you want to say, Meno. Do you realize what a debater's argument you are bringing up, that a man cannot search either for what he knows or for what he does not know? He cannot search for what he knows—since he knows it, there is no need to search—nor for what he does not know, for he does not know what to look for. — Meno, 80e, (tr. Grube)
The problem shows up because logicians, who tend to be the folks most interested in this problem, only look for formal solutions. But the issue is that "eternal implication," or "implication occuring outside time" is assumed. We can think of computation abstractly, but it remains defined by step-wise actions. Yet these abstractions are taken to be "real" as opposed to merely tools.
However, in the brain or in digital computers two things hold:
1. Computation always occurs over time.
2. Computation involves communication and can be thought of in terms of communication models (some very good work on this has been done and the two end up being almost the same thing, "information processing" indeed.) — Count Timothy von Icarus
If this is right then (b∧¬b) introduces instances of formal equivalence that are not provable. — Leontiskos
Why? Because deduction/computation, be it in computers or humans, always involves communication and must occur over some region of space-time, not "all at once and all in one place." Aristotle gets at this in his essentially processual conception of demonstration in the Posterior Analytics. — Count Timothy von Icarus
So then, in a very important functional sense P(I) is not "the same thing as O." — Count Timothy von Icarus
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