Philosophy 101 |
Logic and Illogic and Truth |
Brad Member Ascendant
since 1999-08-20
Posts 5705Jejudo, South Korea |
quote: I agree with most of this. I thought that's what I was saying. However, I wanted to avoid the term 'illogical' because that is too often seen as a synonym for nonsense. What I was trying to get across was that the truth of a statement is not dependent on logical form. To put truth in a logical form is to prove to anyone who accepts the premises that it is true. This is why Godel's theorum caused such headaches for people who probably wanted it refuted. You can always say, "I don't buy it" but if you do, you have to show logically why it doesn't work (either through faulty logic or false premises). If you can't do that, you can still disagree with it (people do this all the time), you could still even be right, there may be a false premise somewhere that you or anybody else has noticed yet, but you drop out of any logical discussion. Political discussion is a different cat altogether. If everything could be based on logic, if we could get everybody to accept the premises and to live with the results, politics would disappear. It is impossible to do any of that because logic is not all-powerful. It can only work under certain conditions and with certain people. People can always say, "I don't buy it," and they do. Thus, we have politics. But when we confuse the three: politics, logic, and truth, it becomes very difficult to understand, to even try to understand why people disagree with you, it becomes very difficult to play politics. And that's what we should be doing at this time. ---------------------------- quote: Heh, you seem to understand what I'm saying. Just don't confuse 'reasonable' with 'logical'. Reasonable has a broader application than logical for it can also mean calm and deliberate thought: "Calm down. Be reasonable." I realize some might see the two terms as interchangable (the Spock complex?), but if we do that it seems that we muddy up the distinction between attitude and logical form. Now, I think people do just that, they muddy up the distinction, for a reason . For when you do that, you combine the power of logical form with any particular statement you agree with. But that's not logical, that's political. Here was my first response: quote: I'll try to explain the latter part of this comment later, but it really only ammounts to why distinctions are important and why they are used and misused politically. [This message has been edited by Brad (02-15-2003 06:16 AM).] |
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Denise
Moderator
Member Seraphic
since 1999-08-22
Posts 22648 |
I think I do have a grasp of where you are coming from, Brad, regarding the distinctions between logic, reasoning, truth, etc., mainly through my helping my sister do research for one of her philosophy classes last year and through my Bible studies. I think we can strongly believe something, and it may very well be true, to the point that we would stake our lives on it. But proving it (even if only to ourselves)in a logical way, methodically outlining the basic premises and arriving at a conclusion, is a different matter entirely. The validity of the conclusion is wholly dependent on the validity of each premise involved in the equation. Your stating that a belief arrived at via an illogical method is not the same thing as stating that it is not true, or could not be true. You are merely pointing out the distinction between logical reasoning and illogical (political?) reasoning. |
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Balladeer
Administrator
Member Empyrean
since 1999-06-05
Posts 25505Ft. Lauderdale, Fl USA |
As one of the great thinkers of our generation has stated - "It all depends what your definition of "is" is.." |
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Denise
Moderator
Member Seraphic
since 1999-08-22
Posts 22648 |
ROTFL Semantics can provide so many delightful hours of entertainment, can't they?! |
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