We've talked about the equivalence of P -> Q to ~P v Q, but it's often more intuitive I think to use another equivalence ~(P & ~Q), and to read this as "no P without Q" . — Srap Tasmaner
A→B means not(A without B). — bongo fury
...This is why I would prefer "No A without B." — Leontiskos
So you think it is literally impossible to give argument 2 without implying argument 1? — Leontiskos
I am going to limit myself to serious interlocutors. — Leontiskos
Explosion is related, but I didn't mention it or need to mention it for the purpose at hand. — TonesInDeepFreeze
This has already been explained to you. — Leontiskos
In symbolic logic, the principle of explosion can be expressed schematically in the following way:
P ∧ ¬P ⊢ Q For any statements P and Q, if P and not-P are both true, then it logically follows that Q is true.
Your contention that argument 2 cannot ever exist without argument 1 is magical, ad hoc thinking. There is nothing serious about it. — Leontiskos
The wikipedia article you cited literally says the principle of explosion is "disastrous" and "trivializes truth and falsity." — NotAristotle
The "principle" of explosion directly infringes the law of non-contradiction. It's silly to even call it a principle. — NotAristotle
use of a rule may not result in a contradiction — NotAristotle
A->not-A, when this rule — NotAristotle
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, so even if it did result in a contradiction, the fact that it doesn't do any work in the argument and isn't followed or actually applied, means that the argument could still be valid. — NotAristotle
Informally not valid. — NotAristotle
The argument is valid; the conclusion follows from the premise. We can show this in four parts:
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
The difference between an argument from the definition of validity and an argument from explosion has been explained multiple times throughout this thread. Tones himself recognized it. — Leontiskos
Tones' definition — NotAristotle
if an argument's conclusion follows from its premises using the rules of inference then they will name this type of argument "valid". — Michael
(1) Two equivalent definitions:
(1a) Df. An argument is valid if and only if every interpretation in which all of the premises are true is an interpretation in which the conclusion is true.
(1b) Df. An argument is valid if and only if there is no interpretation in which all of the premises are true and the conclusion is false.
Therefore:
(2) Th. If there is no interpretation in which all of the premises are true, then the argument is valid. — TonesInDeepFreeze
The wikipedia article you cited literally says the principle of explosion is "disastrous" and "trivializes truth and falsity." — NotAristotle
a contradictory argument — NotAristotle
The "principle" of explosion directly infringes the law of non-contradiction. — NotAristotle
Michael's reasoning is correct there and doesn't contradict anything I've said.
The definition of validity entails that the principle of explosion is valid. — TonesInDeepFreeze
So explosion and "any argument with an inconsistent set of premises is valid" are similar. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Tones is the one being idiosyncratic... :grin:(On Tone's account) ...your idiosyncratic application of your definition of validity... — Leontiskos
the strange way you want to apply your definition is based on explosion — Leontiskos
What you are apparently saying now is that someone who does not understand the principle of explosion cannot apply the definition in the way you prefer. — Leontiskos
If you think that your idiosyncratic application of your definition of validity — Leontiskos
And the definition is not based on the principle of explosion. Rather, the definition implies the defintion of explosion. You have what I said backward. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I am saying no such thing. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I haven't said anything about 'presuppose'. Rather, I have shown that the definition of validity entails the principle of explosion. — TonesInDeepFreeze
you do disagree with Michael, who thinks that your construal of your definition is nothing other than a tacit appeal to the principle of explosion. — Leontiskos
If you link to my quote, time permitting I will address it. — TonesInDeepFreeze
We have a definition of validity. Then we show that that definition entails the principle of explosion. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Explosion is related, but I didn't mention it or need to mention it for the purpose at hand.
There are both semantical and syntactical versions of principles. These are definitions I use. Different authors have variations among them, but they are basically equivalent, except certain authors use 'valid' to mean 'true in a given interpretation', which is an outlier usage. I mention only sentences here for purpose of sentential logic; for predicate logic we have to also consider formulas in general and some of the definitions are a bit more involved.
Semantical:
Valid sentence: A sentence is valid if and only if it is true in all interpretations. A sentence is invalid if and only if it is not valid.
Logically false sentence: A sentence is logically false if and only if it is false in all interpretations.
Contingent sentence: A sentence is contingent if and only if it is neither a validity nor a logical falsehood.
Satisfiable: A set of sentences is satisfiable if and only if there is an interpretation in which all the members are true.
Validity of an argument: An argument is valid if and only if there is no interpretation in which all the premises are true and the conclusion is false.
Entailment: A set of sentences G entails a sentence P if and only if there is no interpretation in which all the members of G are true and P is false.
Sound argument (per an interpretation): An argument is sound (per an interpretation) if and only if it is valid and all the premises are true (per the interpretation). Note: When a certain interpretation is fixed in a certain context, we can drop 'per an interpretation' in that context. For example, if the interpretation is the standard interpretation of arithmetic. For example, informally, when the interpretation is a general agreement about common facts (such as that Kansas is a U.S state).
Explosion: For a set of sentences G, if there is no interpretation in which all the members of G are true, then G entails every sentence.
Syntactical:
Proof: A proof from a set of axioms per a set of inference rules is a finite sequence of sentences such that every entry is either an axiom or comes from previous entries by application of an inference rule. (And there are other equivalent ways to formulate the notion of proof, including natural deduction, but this definition keeps it simple.)
Theorem from a set of axioms: A sentence is a theorem from a set of axioms if and only if there is a proof of the sentence from the axioms.
Contradiction: A sentence is a contradiction if and only if it is the conjunction of a sentence and its negation. (Sometimes we also say that a sentence is a contradiction when it proves a contradiction even if it is not itself a conjunction of a sentence and its negation.)
Inconsistent: A set of sentences is inconsistent if and only if it proves a contradiction. (Sometimes we say the set of sentences is contradictory)
Explosion as a sentence schema: For any sentences P and Q, (P & ~P) -> Q.
Explosion as an inference rule: For any sentences P and Q. From P & ~P infer Q.
/
So explosion and "any argument with an inconsistent set of premises is valid" are similar. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Earlier in the thread you said that the two are "similar," not that one presupposed the other: — Leontiskos
If the premises are inconsistent then the argument is valid by definition (and this does not presuppose the principle of explosion)," is just a terrible interpretation of the definition of validity. — Leontiskos
Arguments are not valid in virtue of being inconsistent. — 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
The argument is valid; the conclusion follows from the premise. We can show this in four parts... — Michael
It's not a definition of validty! It's not supposed to be definition of validity! — TonesInDeepFreeze
but most TPFers are able to recognize its truth. — Leontiskos
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