there may be two senses of the term "valid" in a logical context; one formal, the other informal and that evaluating an argument with either definition may cause different conclusions as to whether a given argument is valid. — NotAristotle
Or even if just one (but not all) of the premises is false and the conclusion is false (I am having trouble thinking of an example that meets this description). — NotAristotle
I can't see how it could matter if we designated a name for that special class of modus ponens described in the OP, where it is structurally consistent with modus ponens but is logically inconsistent. This thread strikes me as more of a primer in formal logic nomenclature than in logic qua logic. — Hanover
This thread strikes me as more of a primer in formal logic nomenclature than in logic qua logic. — Hanover
Would you care to formalize the validity definition as it concerns arguments and do so using logical operators? — NotAristotle
Relevant rules like conditionals "And" "Or" operators-- when those are used correctly the rules are followed and the argument may be considered valid. Any rule that is such that if it weren't followed, the conclusion would be different, is a relevant rule. The rules would ideally be universal and based on logical intuition; if people use different sets of rules, then the rules must be clearly communicated so that that "logic" can be understood or followed.
The meaning of the premise and conclusion depends on the expressions used (I guess this definition isn't unequivocal as it would only apply to ordinary natural language, not to formal logic). I don't know any theories of meaning so I can't answer that. If the meanings differ, then I'm not really sure what the result would be, seems like communication is out the door let alone logic if we can't agree on the same meaning of words and sentences. — NotAristotle
relevant rule is correctly followed just in case.. if it were the case that all the premises were true and the relevant rule is followed, then the conclusion must also be true. — NotAristotle
P->Q. P. Therefore, not-Q. would both flout the meaning of the conditional, and in such a way that it changes the conclusion. It's different than what the conclusion should be (namely Q). — NotAristotle
my definition of valid is different from the ordinary formal logic definition in that I am defining validity in terms of rule-following, not in terms of truth-preservation; truth-preservation is more like a consequence of the definition. — NotAristotle
And a relevant rule is correctly followed just in case.. if it were the case that all the premises were true and the relevant rule is followed, then the conclusion must also be true. — NotAristotle
My point is that we know that If P then Q, where P = A and Q = not-A, implies a contradiction where P is true because Q will be true and both A and not-A will be the case. — Benkei
It is counterintuitive to assert that "if it rains then it doesn't rain" and "it rains" therefore "it doesn't rain" is a valid argument. — Benkei
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