it fails to take into account the fact there are additional causes for a consequent to happen (any time really where correlation isn't causation). — Benkei
1. I take a conditional to be saying: if the antecedent is true, it can't be the case (there is no circumstances such) that the consequent is false. — NotAristotle
2. Rather than a correct conclusion, all we need are conclusions that follow the relevant rules, any and all such conclusions are legitimate. — NotAristotle
3. I refer to connectives as rules. — NotAristotle
4. Then we are out of luck. — NotAristotle
5. I drop the truth preservation condition for validity. — NotAristotle
I don't think it is necessary for me to stipulate that a rule be followed "correctly," just that it be followed. — NotAristotle
I've said it maybe fifty times in this forum: Ordinary formal logic with its material conditional does not pertain to all contexts. But that is not a basis that one should not say how ordinary formal logic handles a question and not a basis that one should not explain ordinary formal logic to people who are talking about it without knowing about it. — TonesInDeepFreeze
* For argumentation, I suggest studying both informal and formal logic. Informal for practical guidance; formal for appreciation of rigor. I don't have particular texts in informal logic to recommend. — TonesInDeepFreeze
This thread strikes me as more of a primer in formal logic nomenclature than in logic qua logic. — Hanover
As to the difference between the material conditional and informal notions of the conditional, that point has been gone over and over and over. If there is something more you want to say about, no one is stopping you. — TonesInDeepFreeze
And I gave you information about modus ponens, consistency and arguments too, to clear things up for you after your confused comment about them. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Why are you telling me that no one is stopping me? — Hanover
Thank you for reminiscing — Hanover
but that's not what my last post was about. — Hanover
1. A -> not-A
2. A
Therefore,
3. not-A.
— NotAristotle
#1 is a contradiction, reducible to ~ A or ~A. Since it concludes A cannot be true, the antecedent (if A) is always false.
#2 is false and contradicts #1 that establishes ~A.
#3 is not a conclusion, but is a restatement of #1. — Hanover
1. Right, I mean P entails Q. The logical equivalence (not-P or Q) is an implication of the conditional, not having the same meaning as the conditional. — NotAristotle
1. Right, I mean P entails Q. The logical equivalence (not-P or Q) is an implication of the conditional, not having the same meaning as the conditional. — NotAristotle
I suppose it is worth asking whether these are the same two inferences, and whether the first is any more "directional" than the second:
(A→B)
A
∴ B
¬A∨B
A
∴ B — Leontiskos
"If A then not A" means "not A or not A". — Michael
"If P then Q" means "not P or Q". — Michael
When I say "If I touch the stove then my hand will burn" I'm not talking in terms of material implication or disjunction at all, but a causal relationship between action and event. — Moliere
You are talking in terms of the first premise of a modus ponens, and that is what the material conditional is in many logics. If there is a difference between modus ponens and disjunctive syllogism, then there is a difference between A→B and ¬A∨B. — Leontiskos
You can of course say that there is no difference and that "informal logic" and formal logic are infinitely separated, but I think that is to put the cart before the horse. Something which has nothing to do with human reasoning is not logic, and so I would say that if someone is talking about something which is wholly separate from human reasoning then they are not talking about logic (and besides that, they are not paying any attention to the historical development and motivations behind formal logics). — Leontiskos
I think there's a difference and I've committed to indications for the difference -- in the recent posts substitution has been the criteria I've been using. — Moliere
But since A -> ~A uses symbols it's more appropriate to call this a formal construction of material implication, which we can write the truth-tables out for and easily conclude it's valid, but unsound, as ↪unenlightened said. — Moliere
I get mixed up this, but I think the disjunction (not-P or Q) can still be true even if P does not imply Q. — NotAristotle
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