It's like that kid in the math class that doesn't see why you don't have two lines of work for a math question: one line for the original equation, and one line for the answer. And everybody else is saying "but you took mental steps to get there."Coito ergo sum wrote:This is just one of those threads that make me shake my head. I'm wondering...are we being trolled to see how long we will argue this thing, or does he really not get it? It seems so bleeding obvious to me, and after it's been explained six ways from Sunday, he still keeps repeating the same error. I think a straight answer to the question I posed in my last post would go a long way to clearing this up.camoguard wrote:Coito ergo sum and I basically agree. I'm bored of this topic because it seems like one of those scenarios where mistermack is trying to establish a point that doesn't really do anything for me. I already know to look at the statement to evaluate truth or falseness. I already know to look at the structure to identify comprehensive logic.
Begging the Question
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Re: Begging the Question
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Re: Begging the Question
It's not just me that thinks it's bollocks. This stuff comes from people who believed in multiple gods and all sorts of spooks and fairies. I'm a sceptic. I don't believe in accepting things just because some iron-age people said it was so.Wikipedia wrote: Syllogism dominated Western philosophical thought until The Age of Enlightenment in the 17th Century. At that time, Sir Francis Bacon rejected the idea of syllogism and deductive reasoning by asserting that it was fallible and illogical[4]. Bacon offered a more inductive approach to logic in which experiments were conducted and axioms were drawn from the observations discovered in them.
And :
That says it for me.Wikipedia wrote: One notable exception to this modern relegation, however, is the continued application of the intricate rules of Aristotelian logic, as taught by St. Thomas Aquinas, in the Roman Curia's Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, and the Apostolic Tribunal of the Roman Rota.
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Re: Begging the Question
Can you use quotes of ancient people after saying you don't follow claims of ancient people? I think you're fired.
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Re: Begging the Question
You owe Francis Bacon a lot more than you realise. That WHY they called it the age of enlightenment.camoguard wrote:Can you use quotes of ancient people after saying you don't follow claims of ancient people? I think you're fired.
.Wikipedia wrote: His works established and popularized deductive methodologies for scientific inquiry, often called the Baconian method or simply, the scientific method.
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Re: Begging the Question
This debate was not about whether it was "bollocks." It was about whether it was "begging the question." It wasn't.mistermack wrote:It's not just me that thinks it's bollocks.Wikipedia wrote: Syllogism dominated Western philosophical thought until The Age of Enlightenment in the 17th Century. At that time, Sir Francis Bacon rejected the idea of syllogism and deductive reasoning by asserting that it was fallible and illogical[4]. Bacon offered a more inductive approach to logic in which experiments were conducted and axioms were drawn from the observations discovered in them.
Are you mad?mistermack wrote:
This stuff comes from people who believed in multiple gods and all sorts of spooks and fairies. I'm a sceptic. I don't believe in accepting things just because some iron-age people said it was so.
Here's a book from 1995 called "A Logic Primer." You need it. http://books.google.com/books?id=7vQ132 ... &q&f=false
Chapter 1 will help you with what an "argument" is. A set of premises....and a conclusion...an argument is valid when, if all the premises are true, the conclusion necessarily follows.
We're not talking about that. We're talking about a basic syllogism. Two premises which, if true, necessarily lead to the conclusion.mistermack wrote:
And :
That says it for me.Wikipedia wrote: One notable exception to this modern relegation, however, is the continued application of the intricate rules of Aristotelian logic, as taught by St. Thomas Aquinas, in the Roman Curia's Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, and the Apostolic Tribunal of the Roman Rota.
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Re: Begging the Question
Where, exactly, did any of what you posted have anything to do with whether the syllogism we've been discussion "begs the question?"mistermack wrote:You owe Francis Bacon a lot more than you realise. That WHY they called it the age of enlightenment.camoguard wrote:Can you use quotes of ancient people after saying you don't follow claims of ancient people? I think you're fired..Wikipedia wrote: His works established and popularized deductive methodologies for scientific inquiry, often called the Baconian method or simply, the scientific method.
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Re: Begging the Question
Mistermack, if you would, could you please tell me, yes or no (and why), whether the following in your opinion begs the question:
All A's are B.
C is an A.
Therefore, C is B.
Does that, or does that not, beg the question?
And, are you claiming Francis Bacon thought it begged the question?
All A's are B.
C is an A.
Therefore, C is B.
Does that, or does that not, beg the question?
And, are you claiming Francis Bacon thought it begged the question?
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Re: Begging the Question
I'm sorry I missed answering this, but it's never too late.
Perhaps I can illustrate it better with black and white, instead of mortal?
Imagine that all men were black. This is what you get.
1) All men are black
2) Socrates is a man
3) Socrates is black
Now imagine that all men, apart from Socrates, are black, but Socrates is white. If I do this,
1) All men are black
2) Socrates is a man
3) Socrates is black
I've just proved that a white man is black! What did I do wrong? Line 2 is still correct. The error is in line 1. Actually all men, apart from Socrates, are black. What I did was assume line 3, that Socrates is black, in the premise. I should have written "All men, apart from Socrates, we don't know about him, are black".
Exactly as I explained earlier.
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It's the same thing more or less. I think we are talking at cross purposes here. The above lines are perfectly correct, the conclusion is blindingly obvious. (Obviously). All I'm saying is that you achieve the conclusion by assuming it in the first place. ( begging the question ). Once you've done that, it's bound to look logical, and you're bound to get the same conclusion that you already assumed.Seraph wrote: Would it be helpful if you thought of the premisses as conditional statements? Try reading the syllogism like this:
Premiss 1: If all men are mortal
Premiss 2:If Socrates is a man
Conclusion: Then Socrates is mortal.
Perhaps I can illustrate it better with black and white, instead of mortal?
Imagine that all men were black. This is what you get.
1) All men are black
2) Socrates is a man
3) Socrates is black
Now imagine that all men, apart from Socrates, are black, but Socrates is white. If I do this,
1) All men are black
2) Socrates is a man
3) Socrates is black
I've just proved that a white man is black! What did I do wrong? Line 2 is still correct. The error is in line 1. Actually all men, apart from Socrates, are black. What I did was assume line 3, that Socrates is black, in the premise. I should have written "All men, apart from Socrates, we don't know about him, are black".
Exactly as I explained earlier.
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Re: Begging the Question
You have done no such thing. The argument goes:mistermack wrote:I've just proved that a white man is black!
Premiss one: All men are black.
Premiss two: Socrates is a man.
Conclusion: Socrates is black.
Now, you do know what a premiss is, don't you? Yes, it is something you propose and if what you propose is wrong, the conclusion is wrong. So, we may say (once again): If all men are black and if Socrates is a man, then Socrates is black. Only one of the two premisses would need to be wrong for the conclusion to be invalid. If you look at premisses as conditional statements - which is what they are in symbolic logic - the issue of circularity (begging the question) flies out the window.
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Re: Begging the Question
If Socrates is black
then Socrates is black.
Everything you say applies equally to that!
.
then Socrates is black.
Everything you say applies equally to that!
.
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Re: Begging the Question
That is not how the argument goes. It goes like this:mistermack wrote:If Socrates is black
then Socrates is black.
If all men are black and if Socrates is a man, then Socrates is black.
That is a valid, non-circular argument.
If you make a presentation and if your presentation is wrong, then your conclusion is invalid.
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Re: Begging the Question
All men are black, apart from one called Socrates. He is green.
Soctates is a man.
Soctates is green.
Amazing. I keep successfully proving line 3, so long as I assume it in line 1.
.
Soctates is a man.
Soctates is green.
Amazing. I keep successfully proving line 3, so long as I assume it in line 1.
.
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Re: Begging the Question
You keep getting the structure wrong every time you attempt to emulate it. The general structure goes like this:mistermack wrote:All men are black, apart from one called Socrates. He is green.
Soctates is a man.
Soctates is green.
Amazing. I keep successfully proving line 3, so long as I assume it in line 1.
All A are B.
C is an A.
Therefore, C is a B
A concrete example of the general scheme is:
All men are human
Socrates is a man.
Therefore, Socrates is human.
See if you can adapt your garblish concerning Soctates into it, and good luck with trying. You really need it.
I'm taking a break from your breathtaking lack of comprehension and consequently sensationally misconstrued "rebuttals". Good night.
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Re: Begging the Question
G'night.
Edit that.
1) If we assume that all men are mortal
2) And we assume that Socrates is a man
3) Then we have assumed that Socrates is mortal.
Nite nite.
.
Edit that.
1) If we assume that all men are mortal
2) And we assume that Socrates is a man
3) Then we have assumed that Socrates is mortal.
Nite nite.
.
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Re: Begging the Question
"Begging the question" isn't about having the conclusion in one of the premisses, it's about having the conclusion in an assumption. premisse != assumption. A premiss is considered to be true at least within the context of the argument. An assumption is considered to be true only temporarily, to perform some operation on the premisses. At some point within the argument, you have to end up with a derivation of the premisses that doesn't require the assumption to be true. If this condition isn't satisfied, you're begging the question.darren wrote:Why do you think that it is not begging the question? I think it is begging the question.FBM wrote:No, this isn't begging the question. Google 'logical fallacies'.darren wrote:Is this an example of begging the question? Why or Why not?
All items in group X have Property Y
A is in group X
A has property Y
Thanks.
I can rephrase the argument like this:
---------
Group X contains (item 1, item 2, item 3, item 4, .....)
item 1 has property Y
item 2 has property Y
item 3 has property Y
item 4 has property Y
...
...
Therefore, all items in group X have Property Y
All items in group X have Property Y
A, (also known as item 3), is in group X
A, (item 3), has property Y
---------
so, you can see that the conclusion is contained within a premise.
what do you think?
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