Richard Baron wrote:
It is true that the arguments that get used as examples in courses tend to be trivial ones. You can see straightaway whether the argument is valid or not. But:
(i) there are more complicated arguments around, and once you learn how to analyse the easy ones, you will be able to analyse the more complex ones. There is an analogy with engineers who handle all the complicated equations that they need in order to build bridges that stay up, or whatever. They are applying techniques that they first learnt with really easy equations, like 3x + 7 = 43;
(ii) philosophical arguments are often expressed in continuous prose, and generally first occur to their authors in that form. One of the best ways to test them for validity, and to reveal unspoken assumptions, is to translate them into the language of symbolic logic. Again, the techniques you need in order to do that are the ones that you learn by doing simple examples;
(iii) if you grasp how logical systems work, you can then go on to grasp important results about logical systems, for example soundness results (if you can prove it, then it must be true), completeness results (if it must be true, then you can prove it) and, most interestingly, incompleteness results (in some systems, you cannot prove things even though they must be true). These are rough and ready statements of soundness, completeness and incompleteness. The true significance of these results can only be grasped if you have a bit of symbolic logic.
Ohh ok. I can definitely understand how what we learned at the beginning of the class was relevant, it was just these derivations that I didn't understand the need. Thanks for such a thorough response, much better than what I got from my teacher, which was, "because it's required." And to think of why I would be transferring after this semester?
I still think trigonometry was completely pointless, but that's a different issue.