Eodnhoj7 wrote: ↑Tue Mar 12, 2019 9:22 pm
A simple yes/no is not just a false dichotomy but the same aristotelian excluded middle you argue is "wrong"...ROFL!!!!!!!!!
ROFL!!!!!!
You didn't pay attention in Constructive Mathematics, did you? The law of excluded middle is considered on case-by-case basis.
In some contexts the decision-space IS two options. True or false. Right or wrong. Yes or no.
In some contexts the decision-space is NOT two options. Like what color I should paint my house, or what to eat for dinner.
The decision/sample-space mandates whether the law of excluded middle is valid. Context
Eodnhoj7 wrote: ↑Tue Mar 12, 2019 9:22 pm
I cannot answer your question in the framework you pose, as the framework you pose is
wrong according to your standards. It is grounded in Aristotelian identity properties.
Please, do explain to all of us - in what framework have you determined the "wrongness" of my standard?
In what framework have you established that "I know murder is wrong" is wrong???
I can't wait to hear this! Because all that I asserted about Aristotelian logic is that it is INCONSISTENT. I never claimed that INCONSISTENCY is WRONG.
Inconsistency is inconsistency.