Is this argument valid?: A, B ? (A?B)
Is the following argument valid?
1. A (premise)
2. B (premise)
? (A?B)
If it is valid, does it make sense in English?
1. A (premise)
2. B (premise)
? (A?B)
If it is valid, does it make sense in English?
Comments (4)
The conclusion, stated in its most complete form (and taking the language as assumed) is:
In any theory T in which A and B are theorems, the sentence A?B is also a theorem.
If we move outside the context of the theory T, the consequent of that conclusion no longer holds.
Also, does this mean that the material conditional (?) only reflect some, but not all elements of if-then statement in English? If A and B are unrelated to each other, but are both true, then A would still imply B?