The "following" of a rule versus it's being merely "present" can be illustrated by the following example:
A->B
B^C
Therefore, C.
In this example, the rule A-> B does not do any work — NotAristotle
"Validity has to do with the conclusion following from the premises, and inconsistency is not evidence that the conclusion follows from the premises." — Leontiskos
That ((P→Q)∧Q), therefore P is not valid, whereas ((A∧¬A)∧(P→Q)∧Q), therefore P is valid, does seem strange to me. Inconsistent premises don't seem to have anything to do with whether the argument "follows." Although I have a feeling that Tones will have something to say about that. — NotAristotle
It seems that that argument would be valid, but only if one accepts that an argument is valid iff there is no interpretation s.t. all premises are true and the conclusion is false per Tones' definition.
If it turned out that validity required more than what that definition suggests (I think it does), then the argument you stated may well turn out to not be valid, as I think is the case. — NotAristotle
you might as well argue "I am a human and it might snow this week, therefore I live in Antartica." — NotAristotle
Even if conclusion and premise are all true i.e. the argument is sound, — NotAristotle
as premise 1 is faulty — NotAristotle
1. If "I am a man and I am not a man" is true then "I am a man" is true.
2. If "I am a man" is true then "I am a man or I am rich" is true.
3. If "I am a man and I am not a man" is true then "I am not a man" is true.
4. If "I am a man or I am rich" is true and if "I am not a man" is true then "I am rich" is true. — Michael
I am a man and I am not a man.
Therefore, I am rich.
It's one argument: — Michael
No, they are two different arguments. One involves inferential reasoning and the other does not. — Leontiskos
1. If "I am a man and I am not a man" is true then "I am a man" is true.
2. If "I am a man" is true then "I am a man or I am rich" is true.
3. If "I am a man and I am not a man" is true then "I am not a man" is true.
4. If "I am a man or I am rich" is true and if "I am not a man" is true then "I am rich" is true. — Michael
I am a man and I am not a man.
Therefore, I am rich.
Perhaps we we disagree about what may be considered a rule of inference. Unless you think an argument that is invalid only coincidentally doesn't follow? Or is it invalid because it does not follow? — NotAristotle
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