aking a foundationalist approach and disregarding other things we think of as being known is explosive in the sense you have to disregard things you already accept. — Cheshire
So what if the LNC isn't really a law. It still applies enough of the time to consider it a constraint on any conclusions. — Cheshire
But, the assumption that 'if we had a really good one' it would have any actual implications to how reality is perceived strikes me as daft. — Cheshire
Why does it have to be "necessary" to be in effect. — Cheshire
A really good one? A good what? — frank
I think we call the LNC necessary because we can't conceive an exception. It's not like we thought: "let's ordain this thing!". Right? — frank
Honestly, I don't think I can. If it looks like the LNC isn't holding for me, I'd wonder if I just had a stroke. :razz: — frank
Could you explain that again? Sorry if I'm a little dense.
You're saying that a monistic system has no constraints on truth? — frank
explosive in the sense you have to disregard things you already accept — Cheshire
EDIT: So, what's that got to do with monism? The LNC isn't usually claimed to be a substance, even if it is foundational in some sense. — bert1
Cheshire would prefer to see us start from where we are, here in the world, with our problems in view instead of down in a brain-vat
Well, historically, this is how logic was developed (both Aristotlean and the parallel Stoic development). — Count Timothy von Icarus
Questions of truth sit in the bucket of "metaphysics," and generally lie external to logic. Obviously, they are related, since we have the questions: "what does it mean to reason from true premises to necessarily true conclusions," or "what are we preserving in truth-preserving arguments?" But, in general, the claim isn't that a logic is defining truth, except instrumentally. — Count Timothy von Icarus
This is why there were charges from Putnam and others that STT was "philosophically sterile." — Count Timothy von Icarus
There hasn't been any serious attempt to go back to correspondence theory. It's defunct.
Anyhow, there are many options aside from correspondence. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I suppose one interesting thing is that correspondence still enjoys a majority for specialists in logic — Count Timothy von Icarus
Well, the 2009 survey results are pretty similar and those were based on the academic departments/sub-departments people work in at the top programs from Philosophical Gourmet Report. If there was a sampling error in the broader 2020 population, it just seems like it would vary more from the broader polling — Count Timothy von Icarus
Ok, but to be clear, it's not anonymous, it's just confidential. That is how they're able to do longitudinal analysis. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.