mistermack wrote:Seraph wrote:Yes, reworded like that the argument would definitely constitute an example of begging the question, but would you please stick with what the syllogism actually says? You are fabricating a new argument by adding words that make it patently circular and equating that with the original version which does no such thing. All men are mortal =/= All mortal humans are mortal. Socrates is a man =/= Socrates is a mortal human.
I have a right to do that, because the original doesn't make it clear whether "all men are mortal" is a defining law, or a claim that can be either right or wrong.
It's a syllogism. It need not be either a "defining law" (whatever that is), or a "claim that can be either right or wrong. It says what it says. That's why you can use X's and Y's and A's instead of Socrates/man/mortal. It doesn't matter if the assertion is actually true.
You can use complete gibberish if you want:
All kerbloops are kerblop.
Shinglezip is a kierbloop.
Therefore, Shinglezip is kerblop.
Or, it can be just wrong:
All dogs are cats.
Felix is a dog.
Therefore, Felix is a cat.
From this syllogism it logically follows that Felix is a cat. If, however, the major premise is wrong, or the minor premise is wrong, then the conclusion will or may be wrong. The mistake your making is taking your own personal beliefs or what you believe to be known facts about the characters in the syllogism and then making unwarranted assumptions. You ASSUME Socrates is the bearded old Greek philosopher, and therefore he is included in the major premise reference to men. However, that is an unwarranted assumption. Socrates may be something else.
Let me add that, if we take our personal beliefs into account, then we know the minor premise is wrong. Socrates is not a man. Socrates is either a corpse or worm food. He WAS a man. He's dead now. So, he's not a man.
mistermack wrote:
mistermack wrote:
You can't demonstrate what the consequence of it being a definition is, without rewording it. And if it's a definition, then using the definition should change nothing at all of the meaning.
It's not me that's playing with words, it's the ambiguity of the premise.
I'm just showing that if it does mean a definition, it's still nonsense.
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Nonsense or not, it doesn't beg the question.
