Eleatic Stranger
Critical Thinker
- Joined
- Jul 21, 2004
- Messages
- 439
Atlas said:
BWSF = Better to Win with Small Force
If W then BWSF. If -W then -BWSF. Therefore, W or -W, BSF.
I thought leaving L in it's unsubstituted form was clearer to explain, but I agree that with you that because of statement #1, "L" is equivalent to "Not W (-W)"
Somehow there is a form fallacy being presented. I was promoting the idea that formal syllogisms relate to 3 variables...
If A then B. If B then C. Therefore, If A then C. But ES has presented one with 4: W, L, BWSF, BLSF, and perhaps a 5th one in the conclusion BSF.
Perhaps it is still 4 with W, -W, BWSF, and -BWSF but when I originally analyzed it this way it made me think like many others that it was a violation of the law of indirect reasoning: If valid reasoning from a statement S leads to a false conclusion, then S is false. And most of us feel Statement #2 is false. Still, for the king such a subjective statement might be true - so I decided my best argument was to call it ill-formed. And leaving the equivalence (L= -W) unsubstituted seemed the most clear.
Actually the form of the argument as presented is a fairly straightforward (and valid) one.... (Though it's hard to render in syllogistic form as it takes, obviously, four lines.)
It goes like this:
1. A Or B
2. If A Then C
3. IF B Then C
4. Therefore: C
Where, of course, A:"I win the battle"; B "I lose the battle"; and C "It is better to use a small force".
(The fact that A and B in this case seem like polar opposites defineable as the negations of the other term is nice, but really not relevant to the form -- all that is needed is that the premise is true, and in the fact that they are polar opposites just means that it's trivially the case that A or B has to be true.)
This means of course that if it isn't a good argument then the fallacy involved can't be a formal one.