marg wrote:No logic is not the leaps between premises. First off, there are no leaps in deductive reasoning.
I don't think you understood what is meant by this. This is predictable, but nonetheless unfortunate. A "leap" between the premises refers to the relationship between statements in an argument . When statements follow, deductively or inductively, that is good logic. When they do not, this is bad logic. Logic as a philosophical discipline is largely concerned with studying the nature and quality of those relationships. That's what logic is. Good logic and bad logic is a matter of making one's statements follow one another. Fallacies are instances in which things do not follow. There are only so many ways I can say it.
All the data for the conclusion is in the premises, such that by virture of the structure/form of the argument's construction, the conclusion follows conclusively. If you think there's a leap in deductive reasoning, please give an example.
All balloons are yellow
I am holding a balloon
Therefore, the balloon I am holding is yellow.[/quote]
My conclusion requires a leap from the premises. It is a good one. Notice this is a false argument. But it is a logical one. Or, put another way, it is valid but unsound.
I gave you Copi's definition of what "logic" is. Had Copi said "logic" is solely about deductive forms as you have been arguing, we wouldn't be having this discussion.
I have not been arguing that logic is solely about deductive form. I've said the opposite, in fact. This stems from your confusion about what deduction and induction actually are. The problem with you relying on Copi's definition is that you don't understand that it isn't supporting the point you want to make. You actually just plain don't get it.
But you agreed with Copi and I asked you, given what Copi said, how do you acting as a logician know that if 2 + 2= 4, God exists, 2 + 2 = 4, therefore God exists...is a bad argument. You didn't answer me on that.
Of course it is a bad argument. One of the premises is blatantly wrong. The logic of the argument is fine. The implicit logic of one of the premises is not. You are incapable of understanding the difference.
Now you are focussing on the word "logic" and how Tal intended to use it. And while I disagree with you on this matter, it is a minor issue in this whole discussion.
Yeah, but your disagreement is utterly misguided for reasons I just laid out. It is relevant to the discussion because it forms the context for how the term logic is being used. There is a lay-sense in which "logical" and "reasonable" are synonyms. Logic isn't being used in that sense.
The only occasion a deductive argument has any value is when the premises are true, the argument is valid, valid being that the conclusion given the structure of the argument follows necessarily and is conclusive, when all that is available, then and only then, can the conclusion be relied upon as true.
We're not concerned with the truth of the conclusion in this discussion. We are concerned with whether the argument uses proper logic, such as not violating the law of noncontradiction. As I already said, more than once, since soundness is a property of true arguments, and we want true arguments, soundness matters to us. That just doesn't matter to the discussion at hand. Honestly, you're not that bright. This is Ok by itself. I do not begrudge you for it. But when you are so stubborn and arrogant at the same time, it comes hard to interact with.
If you have a point, let me know. Don't expect me to read links you put up for no apparent reason.
My point is that "modern rational empiricism" is not some standard term for referring to scientific methodlogy (a single scientific method is a myth). This is a term you got for who knows where that belies a cursory understanding of philosophy of science. I took a dominant school of thought in contrast to the empiricists on the nature of science and linked a detailed discussion on it. I rhetorically asked you to explain it to me so you could see how shallow your understanding is. I wouldn't normally do this, but you felt the need to give me a condescending lecture.