Well, as a Peircean, I am certainly NOT allowed to believe that all valid logic 
is deductive, so Got Me There!

But to the extent that we were talking about logic, is not logic the 
formalization of good thought?  So, then, it behooves one who would claim that 
an argument is logic to formalize it. So, in which logical world (if not 
deductive logic) does the statement that Einstein is usually right lead 
directly, without an intervening premise, to the conclusion that I should 
provisionally believe him.  I think the argument IS deductive (in this case) 
and that the suppressed premise is that I should treat all people who are 
usually right provisionally as authorities.  (i.e., as people to be believed 
until contrary evidence teaches us otherwise. )

n

Nicholas S. Thompson
Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Biology
Clark University
http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/


-----Original Message-----
From: Friam [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of g??? ?
Sent: Tuesday, October 03, 2017 6:30 PM
To: FriAM <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] AI and argument

Hm.  My example is simply an argument that I do NOT think succumbs to that 
fallacy.  Einstein is a reliable, but not completely unchallengeable, 
authority.  And if he is challenged, we can dig into the theory to find our own 
reasoning.

I'm curious if you believe all argument/reasoning can be *accurately* 
formalized?  Worse yet, do you believe that all argument can be reduced to 
deduction?


On 10/03/2017 05:13 PM, Nick Thompson wrote:
> Aren't you missing a premise, if you are seeking a valid deductive argument?
> 
> What connects Albert's thought with your conclusion?

--
☣ gⅼеɳ

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