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Full Idea
The point of conditionals is to show that one will accept modus ponens.
Clarification
'Modus ponens' says 'if P then Q' and 'P', so 'Q'
Gist of Idea
The point of conditionals is to show that one will accept modus ponens
Source
Stephen Read (Thinking About Logic [1995], Ch.3)
Book Ref
Read,Stephen: 'Thinking About Logic' [OUP 1995], p.72
A Reaction
[He attributes this idea to Frank Jackson] This makes the point, against Grice, that the implication of conditionals is not conversational but a matter of logical convention. See Idea 21396 for a very different view.
Related Idea
Idea 21396 Man is distinguished by knowing conditional truths, because impressions are connected [Stoic school, by Long]
7803 | Modal logic began with translation difficulties for 'If...then' [Lewis,CI, by Girle] |
14286 | In nearby worlds where A is true, 'if A,B' is true or false if B is true or false [Stalnaker] |
14283 | A conditional probability does not measure the probability of the truth of any proposition [Lewis, by Edgington] |
13768 | Validity can preserve certainty in mathematics, but conditionals about contingents are another matter [Edgington] |
13853 | It is a mistake to think that conditionals are statements about how the world is [Edgington] |
15422 | Three conditionals theories: Materialism (material conditional), Idealism (true=assertable), Nihilism (no truth) [Burgess] |
15423 | It is doubtful whether the negation of a conditional has any clear meaning [Burgess] |
14623 | Strict conditionals imply counterfactual conditionals: □(A⊃B)⊃(A□→B) [Williamson] |
10989 | The standard view of conditionals is that they are truth-functional [Read] |
10992 | The point of conditionals is to show that one will accept modus ponens [Read] |
11017 | Some people even claim that conditionals do not express propositions [Read] |