Winstonm, on May 24 2008, 08:11 PM, said:
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don't follow this, correct me if i have misunderstood... are you saying that laws of logic did not exist prior to man's utilization of those laws?
Not exactly. I am not clear what you mean by laws of logic. What I am saying is that reason has no need for laws. The laws were created to explain the reasoning.
laws of logic are conceptual, absolute, and transcend space and time... from the atheists.com philosophy pages:
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1. The law of identity: p is p at the same time and in the same respect. Thus: George W. Bush is George W. Bush, and George W. Bush is the son of George Bush.
2. The law of non-contradiction: a conjunctive proposition (one that uses "and", as in "p and q") cannot be both true and false at the same time and in the same respect. Thus the proposition "p and not-p" cannot be true. For example, the proposition "It is raining and it is not raining" is a contradiction, and must be false.
Note: technically, the above example stated fully should read "It is raining and it is not raining at this location and at this time." This additional phrase encompasses the crucial factors of "at the same time" and "in the same respect," but in natural language it isn't common to state them explicitly. When evaluating a person's statements, it is sometimes helpful to consider whether or not they are indeed assuming the truth of such factors.
3. The law of the excluded middle: in any proposition "p," the related disjunctive claim (one that uses "or", as in "p or not-p") must be true. A more informal and common way of stating this is to simply say that either a proposition is true or its negation must be true - thus, either p is true or not-p must be true.
For example, the disjunctive proposition "Either it is raining or it is not raining" must be true. Also, if it is true that it is raining, then the proposition "Either it is raining, or I own a car" must also be true. It really doesn't matter what the second phrase is.
The above "laws of logic" are part of the basic logical rules of inference.
if those were created to explain reasoning it means that someone had to create them, that there was some point when they didn't exist... who created them? when? which of those 3 laws didn't exist prior to humans?
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You also use the expression - accounts for - and I really don't know what you mean by that other than "explains it".
'explains it' is good enough... asking a person to give an account for something based on his worldview is not a simple word game, it's philosophically an important question worth answering, especially given the fact that logic is transcendent and conceptual
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Why is it not just as consistent to state that an action leads to an abtract definition of that action? What you call the laws of logic I would simply call the normal extenstion of reason.
well the problem here is, that view isn't philosophically sound... that's because what one mind might conceive of as reason, another might find unreasonable... your reason might lead to the creation of your own unique laws of logic, mine might lead to a completely different set of laws... that would make it arbitrary... from wiki:
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Arbitrary is a term given to choices and actions which are considered to be done not by means of any underlying principle or logic, but by whim or some decidedly illogical formula
no, laws of logic are either absolute or arbitrary (and if arbitrary, eventually falling into absurdity)
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By the way, don't make the mistake of thinking my views are either atheistic or Christian - my views are my own and do not coincide with either view.
i apologize if i made an assumption along those lines
outside of that, you're perfectly entitled to your view... philosophers have always held that logical absolutes (laws) are conceptual realities that do not depend upon human minds or the physical universe for their existence...
blackshoe, on May 24 2008, 07:17 PM, said:
luke warm, on May 24 2008, 03:16 PM, said:
the argument is valid and any text book would show that it is
Pfui. You presuppose that a two-valued logic system accurately describes reality, an assertion that is not proven, and may well be wrong.
that isn't even close to what the argument entails
han, on May 24 2008, 08:04 PM, said:
Of course the argument cannot be understood because it uses words that are defined as more words that have no precise meaning except in the minds of the devout.
from your (mathmatical i believe) frame of reference, words and philosophical bickering possibly has less meaning and is less understandable than they might be from another's
"Paul Krugman is a stupid person's idea of what a smart person sounds like." Newt Gingrich (paraphrased)