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Natural language into propositional logic


Is an argument in natural language as logically valid as in formal logic?Questions about the relationship between Wittgenstein's Philosophical Investigations and TractatusWhere Wittgenstein argues that thinking is done in natural language?













0















Need some help putting these two examples of natural language into sentence logic. For reference, use the transcription guide below:



D = you think so; E = I think so; F = it is true



  1. If you think so, I think so. And if I think so, you think so. (is it possible to express this using just one connective?)


  2. Unless it isn’t true, you don’t think so.










share|improve this question



















  • 2





    Seems like a homework question and you are not showing any effort.

    – Jishin Noben
    Mar 29 at 14:28






  • 1





    These may fly in Mathematical logic but these are not even meaningful propositions by Philosophy standards. They would need more details than provided. The point of deductive logic is to prevent or reduce deception or ambiguity traps. Mathematical logic doesn't always adhere to that purpose. They do their own thing.

    – Logikal
    Mar 29 at 22:48











  • How about the fact that I’m trying to learn all of this out of a book and need a little help that I cannot get elsewhere? I put in plenty of effort, it’s just when I’m not totally sure of an answer, I like to receive confirmation before I move onto a different problem set or topic. I don’t understand why you have to pass judgement.

    – A. Delarge
    Mar 30 at 4:39






  • 1





    You have not shown that effort -- that is, you have not posted what you have tried so we might offer advice on where you are having trouble.

    – Graham Kemp
    Mar 30 at 5:07
















0















Need some help putting these two examples of natural language into sentence logic. For reference, use the transcription guide below:



D = you think so; E = I think so; F = it is true



  1. If you think so, I think so. And if I think so, you think so. (is it possible to express this using just one connective?)


  2. Unless it isn’t true, you don’t think so.










share|improve this question



















  • 2





    Seems like a homework question and you are not showing any effort.

    – Jishin Noben
    Mar 29 at 14:28






  • 1





    These may fly in Mathematical logic but these are not even meaningful propositions by Philosophy standards. They would need more details than provided. The point of deductive logic is to prevent or reduce deception or ambiguity traps. Mathematical logic doesn't always adhere to that purpose. They do their own thing.

    – Logikal
    Mar 29 at 22:48











  • How about the fact that I’m trying to learn all of this out of a book and need a little help that I cannot get elsewhere? I put in plenty of effort, it’s just when I’m not totally sure of an answer, I like to receive confirmation before I move onto a different problem set or topic. I don’t understand why you have to pass judgement.

    – A. Delarge
    Mar 30 at 4:39






  • 1





    You have not shown that effort -- that is, you have not posted what you have tried so we might offer advice on where you are having trouble.

    – Graham Kemp
    Mar 30 at 5:07














0












0








0


0






Need some help putting these two examples of natural language into sentence logic. For reference, use the transcription guide below:



D = you think so; E = I think so; F = it is true



  1. If you think so, I think so. And if I think so, you think so. (is it possible to express this using just one connective?)


  2. Unless it isn’t true, you don’t think so.










share|improve this question
















Need some help putting these two examples of natural language into sentence logic. For reference, use the transcription guide below:



D = you think so; E = I think so; F = it is true



  1. If you think so, I think so. And if I think so, you think so. (is it possible to express this using just one connective?)


  2. Unless it isn’t true, you don’t think so.







natural-language






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Mar 29 at 20:56









Jishin Noben

992219




992219










asked Mar 29 at 1:32









A. DelargeA. Delarge

523




523







  • 2





    Seems like a homework question and you are not showing any effort.

    – Jishin Noben
    Mar 29 at 14:28






  • 1





    These may fly in Mathematical logic but these are not even meaningful propositions by Philosophy standards. They would need more details than provided. The point of deductive logic is to prevent or reduce deception or ambiguity traps. Mathematical logic doesn't always adhere to that purpose. They do their own thing.

    – Logikal
    Mar 29 at 22:48











  • How about the fact that I’m trying to learn all of this out of a book and need a little help that I cannot get elsewhere? I put in plenty of effort, it’s just when I’m not totally sure of an answer, I like to receive confirmation before I move onto a different problem set or topic. I don’t understand why you have to pass judgement.

    – A. Delarge
    Mar 30 at 4:39






  • 1





    You have not shown that effort -- that is, you have not posted what you have tried so we might offer advice on where you are having trouble.

    – Graham Kemp
    Mar 30 at 5:07













  • 2





    Seems like a homework question and you are not showing any effort.

    – Jishin Noben
    Mar 29 at 14:28






  • 1





    These may fly in Mathematical logic but these are not even meaningful propositions by Philosophy standards. They would need more details than provided. The point of deductive logic is to prevent or reduce deception or ambiguity traps. Mathematical logic doesn't always adhere to that purpose. They do their own thing.

    – Logikal
    Mar 29 at 22:48











  • How about the fact that I’m trying to learn all of this out of a book and need a little help that I cannot get elsewhere? I put in plenty of effort, it’s just when I’m not totally sure of an answer, I like to receive confirmation before I move onto a different problem set or topic. I don’t understand why you have to pass judgement.

    – A. Delarge
    Mar 30 at 4:39






  • 1





    You have not shown that effort -- that is, you have not posted what you have tried so we might offer advice on where you are having trouble.

    – Graham Kemp
    Mar 30 at 5:07








2




2





Seems like a homework question and you are not showing any effort.

– Jishin Noben
Mar 29 at 14:28





Seems like a homework question and you are not showing any effort.

– Jishin Noben
Mar 29 at 14:28




1




1





These may fly in Mathematical logic but these are not even meaningful propositions by Philosophy standards. They would need more details than provided. The point of deductive logic is to prevent or reduce deception or ambiguity traps. Mathematical logic doesn't always adhere to that purpose. They do their own thing.

– Logikal
Mar 29 at 22:48





These may fly in Mathematical logic but these are not even meaningful propositions by Philosophy standards. They would need more details than provided. The point of deductive logic is to prevent or reduce deception or ambiguity traps. Mathematical logic doesn't always adhere to that purpose. They do their own thing.

– Logikal
Mar 29 at 22:48













How about the fact that I’m trying to learn all of this out of a book and need a little help that I cannot get elsewhere? I put in plenty of effort, it’s just when I’m not totally sure of an answer, I like to receive confirmation before I move onto a different problem set or topic. I don’t understand why you have to pass judgement.

– A. Delarge
Mar 30 at 4:39





How about the fact that I’m trying to learn all of this out of a book and need a little help that I cannot get elsewhere? I put in plenty of effort, it’s just when I’m not totally sure of an answer, I like to receive confirmation before I move onto a different problem set or topic. I don’t understand why you have to pass judgement.

– A. Delarge
Mar 30 at 4:39




1




1





You have not shown that effort -- that is, you have not posted what you have tried so we might offer advice on where you are having trouble.

– Graham Kemp
Mar 30 at 5:07






You have not shown that effort -- that is, you have not posted what you have tried so we might offer advice on where you are having trouble.

– Graham Kemp
Mar 30 at 5:07











1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















3














  1. This sentence is a conjunction of two conditionals:

(D→E) ∧ (E→D)



You can put it into a single connective by using CB: D↔E



  1. I was taught that "unless" is a flag for the "or" connective, so I will write my answer like that. If you rewrite the sentence to "You don’t think so unless it isn’t true", then the logic you get is:

(~F)∨~D






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    Thank you so much for your response. For #2, however, I was recently taught that “X, unless Y” is the same (usually) as ~Y > X. Would it be possible to write it out then as ~~D > ~F, which would just be D > ~F?

    – A. Delarge
    Mar 29 at 2:53






  • 1





    Hello, if you were taught that "X unless Y" meant X ∨ ~Y, then "You don’t think so unless it isn’t true" would be "You don’t think so" ∨ ~"it isn’t true" = ~D ∨ ~~F = ~D ∨ F

    – cenicero
    Mar 29 at 4:29











  • Unless is not always a contropositive. Unless expresses a negative term. For example, you will fail this class unless you score an 85 or above. This would be if you do not score 85 or above then you will fail this class. That is not a contrapositive. Another example, you are hell bound unless you accept Christ as a savior. This means if you do not accept Christ as a savior then you are hellhound. Notice whatever verbiage after UNLESS becomes the antecedent of the conditional. You can perform logical equivalence after to translate it correctly.

    – Logikal
    Mar 29 at 22:44











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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









3














  1. This sentence is a conjunction of two conditionals:

(D→E) ∧ (E→D)



You can put it into a single connective by using CB: D↔E



  1. I was taught that "unless" is a flag for the "or" connective, so I will write my answer like that. If you rewrite the sentence to "You don’t think so unless it isn’t true", then the logic you get is:

(~F)∨~D






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    Thank you so much for your response. For #2, however, I was recently taught that “X, unless Y” is the same (usually) as ~Y > X. Would it be possible to write it out then as ~~D > ~F, which would just be D > ~F?

    – A. Delarge
    Mar 29 at 2:53






  • 1





    Hello, if you were taught that "X unless Y" meant X ∨ ~Y, then "You don’t think so unless it isn’t true" would be "You don’t think so" ∨ ~"it isn’t true" = ~D ∨ ~~F = ~D ∨ F

    – cenicero
    Mar 29 at 4:29











  • Unless is not always a contropositive. Unless expresses a negative term. For example, you will fail this class unless you score an 85 or above. This would be if you do not score 85 or above then you will fail this class. That is not a contrapositive. Another example, you are hell bound unless you accept Christ as a savior. This means if you do not accept Christ as a savior then you are hellhound. Notice whatever verbiage after UNLESS becomes the antecedent of the conditional. You can perform logical equivalence after to translate it correctly.

    – Logikal
    Mar 29 at 22:44















3














  1. This sentence is a conjunction of two conditionals:

(D→E) ∧ (E→D)



You can put it into a single connective by using CB: D↔E



  1. I was taught that "unless" is a flag for the "or" connective, so I will write my answer like that. If you rewrite the sentence to "You don’t think so unless it isn’t true", then the logic you get is:

(~F)∨~D






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    Thank you so much for your response. For #2, however, I was recently taught that “X, unless Y” is the same (usually) as ~Y > X. Would it be possible to write it out then as ~~D > ~F, which would just be D > ~F?

    – A. Delarge
    Mar 29 at 2:53






  • 1





    Hello, if you were taught that "X unless Y" meant X ∨ ~Y, then "You don’t think so unless it isn’t true" would be "You don’t think so" ∨ ~"it isn’t true" = ~D ∨ ~~F = ~D ∨ F

    – cenicero
    Mar 29 at 4:29











  • Unless is not always a contropositive. Unless expresses a negative term. For example, you will fail this class unless you score an 85 or above. This would be if you do not score 85 or above then you will fail this class. That is not a contrapositive. Another example, you are hell bound unless you accept Christ as a savior. This means if you do not accept Christ as a savior then you are hellhound. Notice whatever verbiage after UNLESS becomes the antecedent of the conditional. You can perform logical equivalence after to translate it correctly.

    – Logikal
    Mar 29 at 22:44













3












3








3







  1. This sentence is a conjunction of two conditionals:

(D→E) ∧ (E→D)



You can put it into a single connective by using CB: D↔E



  1. I was taught that "unless" is a flag for the "or" connective, so I will write my answer like that. If you rewrite the sentence to "You don’t think so unless it isn’t true", then the logic you get is:

(~F)∨~D






share|improve this answer















  1. This sentence is a conjunction of two conditionals:

(D→E) ∧ (E→D)



You can put it into a single connective by using CB: D↔E



  1. I was taught that "unless" is a flag for the "or" connective, so I will write my answer like that. If you rewrite the sentence to "You don’t think so unless it isn’t true", then the logic you get is:

(~F)∨~D







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Mar 29 at 12:06









Solomon Ucko

1033




1033










answered Mar 29 at 1:57









cenicerocenicero

311




311







  • 1





    Thank you so much for your response. For #2, however, I was recently taught that “X, unless Y” is the same (usually) as ~Y > X. Would it be possible to write it out then as ~~D > ~F, which would just be D > ~F?

    – A. Delarge
    Mar 29 at 2:53






  • 1





    Hello, if you were taught that "X unless Y" meant X ∨ ~Y, then "You don’t think so unless it isn’t true" would be "You don’t think so" ∨ ~"it isn’t true" = ~D ∨ ~~F = ~D ∨ F

    – cenicero
    Mar 29 at 4:29











  • Unless is not always a contropositive. Unless expresses a negative term. For example, you will fail this class unless you score an 85 or above. This would be if you do not score 85 or above then you will fail this class. That is not a contrapositive. Another example, you are hell bound unless you accept Christ as a savior. This means if you do not accept Christ as a savior then you are hellhound. Notice whatever verbiage after UNLESS becomes the antecedent of the conditional. You can perform logical equivalence after to translate it correctly.

    – Logikal
    Mar 29 at 22:44












  • 1





    Thank you so much for your response. For #2, however, I was recently taught that “X, unless Y” is the same (usually) as ~Y > X. Would it be possible to write it out then as ~~D > ~F, which would just be D > ~F?

    – A. Delarge
    Mar 29 at 2:53






  • 1





    Hello, if you were taught that "X unless Y" meant X ∨ ~Y, then "You don’t think so unless it isn’t true" would be "You don’t think so" ∨ ~"it isn’t true" = ~D ∨ ~~F = ~D ∨ F

    – cenicero
    Mar 29 at 4:29











  • Unless is not always a contropositive. Unless expresses a negative term. For example, you will fail this class unless you score an 85 or above. This would be if you do not score 85 or above then you will fail this class. That is not a contrapositive. Another example, you are hell bound unless you accept Christ as a savior. This means if you do not accept Christ as a savior then you are hellhound. Notice whatever verbiage after UNLESS becomes the antecedent of the conditional. You can perform logical equivalence after to translate it correctly.

    – Logikal
    Mar 29 at 22:44







1




1





Thank you so much for your response. For #2, however, I was recently taught that “X, unless Y” is the same (usually) as ~Y > X. Would it be possible to write it out then as ~~D > ~F, which would just be D > ~F?

– A. Delarge
Mar 29 at 2:53





Thank you so much for your response. For #2, however, I was recently taught that “X, unless Y” is the same (usually) as ~Y > X. Would it be possible to write it out then as ~~D > ~F, which would just be D > ~F?

– A. Delarge
Mar 29 at 2:53




1




1





Hello, if you were taught that "X unless Y" meant X ∨ ~Y, then "You don’t think so unless it isn’t true" would be "You don’t think so" ∨ ~"it isn’t true" = ~D ∨ ~~F = ~D ∨ F

– cenicero
Mar 29 at 4:29





Hello, if you were taught that "X unless Y" meant X ∨ ~Y, then "You don’t think so unless it isn’t true" would be "You don’t think so" ∨ ~"it isn’t true" = ~D ∨ ~~F = ~D ∨ F

– cenicero
Mar 29 at 4:29













Unless is not always a contropositive. Unless expresses a negative term. For example, you will fail this class unless you score an 85 or above. This would be if you do not score 85 or above then you will fail this class. That is not a contrapositive. Another example, you are hell bound unless you accept Christ as a savior. This means if you do not accept Christ as a savior then you are hellhound. Notice whatever verbiage after UNLESS becomes the antecedent of the conditional. You can perform logical equivalence after to translate it correctly.

– Logikal
Mar 29 at 22:44





Unless is not always a contropositive. Unless expresses a negative term. For example, you will fail this class unless you score an 85 or above. This would be if you do not score 85 or above then you will fail this class. That is not a contrapositive. Another example, you are hell bound unless you accept Christ as a savior. This means if you do not accept Christ as a savior then you are hellhound. Notice whatever verbiage after UNLESS becomes the antecedent of the conditional. You can perform logical equivalence after to translate it correctly.

– Logikal
Mar 29 at 22:44

















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