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
2. I take your question to be what would a rule be, how is it defined? I would define a rule as a member belonging to a set that exhausts all "truth possibilities." I would add that the following of a rule may not result in a contradiction. — NotAristotle
A rule relating two different variables would have (I think) 15 possible truth configurations. — NotAristotle
The rules must at least enable all those possibilities to be instantiated (though perhaps it may exclude possibilities that are necessarily contradictory). — NotAristotle
3. "Some proposition is not the case"
Both propositions must be true
Either proposition must be true
If the one proposition is true, so must the consequent proposition
Both propositions are either both true or both false. — NotAristotle
5. Valid argument = following the rules, where rules are defined as those operations that enable each truth possibility to be instantiated but that do not result in a contradiction by following that rule. — NotAristotle
8. Not logical anarchy; the rules must enable all truth possibilities to be instantiated except that the rule may not result in a contradiction if it is followed. — NotAristotle
This way of defining validity may be preferable because it deals with cases such as A->not-A therefore Not-A that are intuitively illogical; such an argument does not involve the following of a rule, and so it is not valid. — NotAristotle
Similarly, A, A->not-A therefore not-A another intuitively illogical seeming argument would not be valid because the following of the rule results in a contradiction. — NotAristotle
...but it does not have the same meaning qua modus ponens (or modus tollens) — Leontiskos
the full meaning of P->Q — NotAristotle
the "meaning" of the disjunctive is not specific enough — NotAristotle
Whether or not the two expressions are semantically equivalent in a meta-logical sense depends on how one is using them. — Leontiskos
You could say that, but you would end up having to admit that "P does not imply Q" cannot be formalized in any way whatsoever, at least in propositional logic. — Leontiskos
According to you, what is the full meaning of P -> Q? — TonesInDeepFreeze
With the argument A->not-A, A, therefore not-A, the following of the rule, namely the conditional in that argument, leads to a contradiction between A and not-A — NotAristotle
I have tried to formalize it and can't seem to do so; this is an approximation:
(A v ~A) → (~B v ~A) — NotAristotle
If the conditional is construed as only being true when A and B are true — NotAristotle
Then note:
P -> Q |= ~P v Q
and
~P v Q |= ~P v Q — TonesInDeepFreeze
I just think you're disregarding the proviso I stated, namely that a rule must actually have been followed, not merely be present in an argument. — NotAristotle
what I mean is that the possibilities for what is true and what is false are arrayed across a truth table. — NotAristotle
So for the expression A v B, the truth table is T, T, T, F. On the other hand, T, F, F, F, is A ^ B. Every possibility wherein T is present must be uniquely accounted for by the rules. — NotAristotle
Down the slippery slope of formalized illogicality. — NotAristotle
just meta-logically different — NotAristotle
No, it doesn't result in a contradiction. The conclusion is ~A, which is not a contradiction. Yes, the premises are inconsistent, but your definition of "rule" doesn't disallow inconsistent sets of premises, only required is that application of the rule doesn't allow a conclusion that is a contradiction. The particular application you mentioned doesn't derive a contradiction. — TonesInDeepFreeze
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