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Is this argument valid?: A, B ? (A?B)

Varun Soontornniyomkij December 10, 2017 at 09:48 3500 views 4 comments Questions
Is the following argument valid?

1. A (premise)
2. B (premise)
? (A?B)

If it is valid, does it make sense in English?

Comments (4)

Deleted User December 10, 2017 at 18:53 ¶ #132195
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andrewk December 10, 2017 at 21:02 ¶ #132242
It is valid, but care needs to be taken not to take it out of context, as that can lead to an incorrect statement.

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.
Varun Soontornniyomkij December 11, 2017 at 00:19 ¶ #132298
Reply to tim wood So it can be counted as one of valid rules of inference (but not commonly taught in a logic class) then?

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?
Deleted User December 11, 2017 at 01:40 ¶ #132330
This user has been deleted and all their posts removed.