Paradox of entailment Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
The paradox of entailment states that inconsistent premises always make an argument valid.This is because validity is defined as follows: An argument is valid if and only if there is no possible situation in which all the premises are true and the conclusion false (the premises entail the conclusion).
Example:
- If it is raining, water exists. (1st premise)
- It is raining. (2nd premise)
- water exists (conclusion)
A result of this definition is that inconsistent premises - ie premises that cannot all be true in any one situation - always satisfy this definition, and this holds even if the conclusion is false!
Example:
- It is raining (1st premise)
- It is not raining (2nd premise)
- water exists (conclusion)
Note the argument would not be sound, in the sense that its premises and conclusion are all true and the conclusion follows from the premises, but it would be valid.
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