Atlas[/i][b]
Did you mean..
1) A or Not A
2) If A Then C
3) If Not A Then C
4) Therefore: C
I think that's what you were getting at.
[/b][/quote]
The actual argument is probably more aptly formalized that way said:
You might be surprised by this. I think that it's much more difficult than you think to formalize this properly.
The reason, of course (and part of the flaw in the King's original argument above) is that "better" is inherently comparative. Better than what? If the statement is "if I win, it is better to have sent a large force," then a proper analysis of "better to have sent a small force" will show that the two then-clauses are not identical.
So what we really have is a formal argument of the form
A or not-A
if A then B
if not-A then B'
hence B or B'
which by the fallacy of equivocation is made to appear that B and B' are identical (B), and hence that B is proven.
I doubt that you can correctly formalize "better" without resolving this equivocation.
Now, I don't think this is
exactly right, but I do think it's hitting the right point: the problem as I see it
is a fallacy of equivocation, and also one on the word "better".
The problem with how you've phrased it is that, as I see it, "it is better to have sent a small force" is just leaving the last term of the comparative sentence implicit -- namely, "It is better to have sent a small force
than a large one.", and when phrased that way the sentential form is identical in the second and third premises.
The form, in other words, is identical to the one I've posted -- the equivocation comes in in a sneakier manner, between the second and third premises, and the conclusion. It is an equivocation between "better" in the sense of
actual utility, and "better" in the sense of "
rationally expected utility".
To see how this works out, take the following example:
1. I will either win or lose the battle.
2. If I win the battle, I would rationally have expected the better utility from sending a small force (than a larger one).
3. If I lose the battle, I would rationally have expected the better utility from sending a small force (than a larger one).
4. Therefore, the rational expected utility from sending a small force is greater than the rationally expected utility from sending a large force.(Or in other words, it is better to send a small force than a large one.)
Now, in this phrasing the second and third premises are both blatantly wrong -- the rationally expected utility from sending the large force is greater than the rationally expected utility from sending the small force, since the small force is more likely to lose. Furthermore, the
actual outcome has no bearing on this fact.
Alternatively, look at what happens if we phrase it in terms of actual utility:
1. I will either win or lose the battle.
2. If I win the battle, the actual utility from sending a small force is greater than the actual utility gained from sending a larger one.
3. If I lose the battle, the actual utility from sending a small force is greater than the actual utility gained from sending a larger one.
4. Therefore, the actual utility from sending a small force is greater than the actual utility gained from a larger one.
In this example the second and third premises are both true -- and the conclusion is true as well. However, the truth involved is a trivial one that has nothing to do with, prior to the event,what act one should rationally expect to yield the greater utility (barring, as we are, actual knowledge of the outcome itself).
The problem comes in when we note that the king is taking the first three lines of the 'actual utility' reading of 'better' form of the argument, and the conclusion of the 'rationally expected utility' reading of better form of the argument.
That, as I see it, is the problem involved in his argument.