Assertions are Replications of Syntax, thus necessitating Syntax as an Assertion
Posted: Sun Mar 08, 2020 7:14 pm
The descriptive value of a logical statement is a recursion of the general syntax which forms the rules of the assertion.
In a statement such as A --> B the rules of the syntax necessitates a specific format through which the words can be ordered. This order, that which allows for a clarity of words, is by nature subject to its own syntax as a descriptive statement. Where the syntax laws may exist as A --> B, the rules which define the following statement of X --> Y are a recursion of the syntax into a new form.
Considering the syntax must follow its own syntax, if the syntax is to be properly defined, any expression of the syntax, through the manifestation of a proposition following in accords with the syntax, are a replication of the syntax itself. This necessitates that while an assertion must follow a syntax, this syntax by default is an assertion considering both the syntax and assertion are inseperable.
The syntax rule of A --> B replicates itself under the assertion X --> Y and as such forms a tautological statement of (A-->B) --> (X-->Y) where any syntax, expressing itself through an assertion is by default an assertion itself.
In a statement such as A --> B the rules of the syntax necessitates a specific format through which the words can be ordered. This order, that which allows for a clarity of words, is by nature subject to its own syntax as a descriptive statement. Where the syntax laws may exist as A --> B, the rules which define the following statement of X --> Y are a recursion of the syntax into a new form.
Considering the syntax must follow its own syntax, if the syntax is to be properly defined, any expression of the syntax, through the manifestation of a proposition following in accords with the syntax, are a replication of the syntax itself. This necessitates that while an assertion must follow a syntax, this syntax by default is an assertion considering both the syntax and assertion are inseperable.
The syntax rule of A --> B replicates itself under the assertion X --> Y and as such forms a tautological statement of (A-->B) --> (X-->Y) where any syntax, expressing itself through an assertion is by default an assertion itself.