You're talking about material implications, colloquially refered to as "if" statements. They're a formal construct with particular truth conditions (true if and only if both the antecedent and the consequent are true or if the antecedent is false). They are not the definition of "if", though many bad teachers often equate the two. An astounding amount of metaphorical blood has been shed in both philosophy and linguistics trying to figure out how to describe what "if" actually means formally (spoiler alert: this is still a very open, very difficult question, which is why so many posts here are arguing about it with no real conclusion), so there is actually no such thing as an actual "if statement" in the overwhelming majority of logics.Singletap said:Hello Escapist Forum
Today me and my tenth grade geometry teacher had a argument. I'm not great in math class but we recently started logic and it seems to come very easily to me, most likely through making games and such on the computer.
Here is the problem and I don't see the logic in her teachings.
We were going over the "If" "Then" statements and one of the problems was.
If you take your medicine then you will feel better
we then had to take the 4 truth or false cases and decide rather they are true or false, easy right?
Well I had a small problem with case 3 and 4, they said
"If you don't take your medicine then you'll feel better"
"If you don't take your medicine then you won't feel better"
She said they default as true, I argued that that's impossible, they must be undefined, I see no truth in these cases you can't just assume in math without a reason to.
She got very worked up thinking that I was trying to confuse the kids but I simply did not understand the logic and she didn't make a good attempt to show me what she was saying. I'm still confused and I believe she is wrong I will change my thoughts if I can see a sense of reason.
Can I get some help here.
From Jesse Bergerstock aka SingleTap "Tap"
Actually, it's a great example to use, because it gets to the heart of the matter--the truth of a statement, in the sense that we use "truth" in logic, isn't based on whether the statement is useful or whether we agree with it. In the logic realm, "true" and "false" are really just based on whether or not the logic is sound.Plurralbles said:the example was kind of stupid
So you were taking "If you take your medicine then you will feel better" as the true statement, correct? Then you needed to determine if "case 3 and 4" were true or false, based on the first true statement. Am I right in this explanation of the problems?Singletap said:-snip-
We were going over the "If" "Then" statements and one of the problems was.
If you take your medicine then you will feel better
we then had to take the 4 truth or false cases and decide rather they are true or false, easy right?
Well I had a small problem with case 3 and 4, they said
"If you don't take your medicine then you'll feel better"
"If you don't take your medicine then you won't feel better"
She said they default as true, I argued that that's impossible, they must be undefined, I see no truth in these cases you can't just assume in math without a reason to.
-snip-
Because in common parlance 'Truth' is the opposite of 'False'. It's quicker to say. Simple really. I'd have thought that you'd have been taught what it really means in your classes. Perhaps that's coming later after challenging you with this or something.Singletap said:So why did they choose to use the word truth in stead of "Not false"
Saying you'll feel better if you take your medicine does NOT prove that you won't coincidentally feel better if you don't, or that you will feel like shit if you don't. Meaning those cannot be declared false, but they also cannot be declared true.Singletap said:Hello Escapist Forum
Today me and my tenth grade geometry teacher had a argument. I'm not great in math class but we recently started logic and it seems to come very easily to me, most likely through making games and such on the computer.
Here is the problem and I don't see the logic in her teachings.
We were going over the "If" "Then" statements and one of the problems was.
If you take your medicine then you will feel better
we then had to take the 4 truth or false cases and decide rather they are true or false, easy right?
Well I had a small problem with case 3 and 4, they said
"If you don't take your medicine then you'll feel better"
"If you don't take your medicine then you won't feel better"
She said they default as true, I argued that that's impossible, they must be undefined, I see no truth in these cases you can't just assume in math without a reason to.
She got very worked up thinking that I was trying to confuse the kids but I simply did not understand the logic and she didn't make a good attempt to show me what she was saying. I'm still confused and I believe she is wrong I will change my thoughts if I can see a sense of reason.
Can I get some help here.
From Jesse Bergerstock aka SingleTap "Tap"
There is no information placing them into one category of the other, you don't just say something is true because you can't prove it false, I just did an extensive unit on boolean algebra and logic in a Discrete Mathematics course, she's full of shit, the whole point is to PROVE these things.Danny Ocean said:Because in common parlance 'Truth' is the opposite of 'False'. It's quicker to say. Simple really. I'd have thought that you'd have been taught what it really means in your classes. Perhaps that's coming later after challenging you with this or something.Singletap said:So why did they choose to use the word truth in stead of "Not false"
I am no math teacher so I may be wrong but, math almost always has to be true unless you do it wrong. With math you should never have to guess, there is always a formula or way to do a something. Also if you do not have enough info to complete a problem you can almost never do it. Even with variables you are not guessing you have enough information to solve it. With conditional statements A has to lead to B (if it rains we do not play the game) sorry that is just how it goes. The only thing I do not understand is "if you do not take the medicine then you will get better" maybe eventually you will get better. Correct me if I am wrong please.Singletap said:She said they default as true, I argued that that's impossible, they must be undefined, I see no truth in these cases you can't just assume in math without a reason to.
She got very worked up thinking that I was trying to confuse the kids but I simply did not understand the logic and she didn't make a good attempt to show me what she was saying. I'm still confused and I believe she is wrong I will change my thoughts if I can see a sense of reason.
Can I get some help here.
The way I see it is this:Singletap said:Hello Escapist Forum
Today me and my tenth grade geometry teacher had a argument. I'm not great in math class but we recently started logic and it seems to come very easily to me, most likely through making games and such on the computer.
Here is the problem and I don't see the logic in her teachings.
We were going over the "If" "Then" statements and one of the problems was.
If you take your medicine then you will feel better
we then had to take the 4 truth or false cases and decide rather they are true or false, easy right?
Well I had a small problem with case 3 and 4, they said
"If you don't take your medicine then you'll feel better"
"If you don't take your medicine then you won't feel better"
She said they default as true, I argued that that's impossible, they must be undefined, I see no truth in these cases you can't just assume in math without a reason to.
She got very worked up thinking that I was trying to confuse the kids but I simply did not understand the logic and she didn't make a good attempt to show me what she was saying. I'm still confused and I believe she is wrong I will change my thoughts if I can see a sense of reason.
Can I get some help here.
From Jesse Bergerstock aka SingleTap "Tap"
While I may not know the specifics of proofs I can give some advice about student/teacher relations. If you have a disagreement with what is being taught, it's best to say these things in a more solo or private setting, instead of in front of the class.Singletap said:snip
Well, I'd say your sentiments are quite common; not in that you didn't question how geometry was taught but that you aren't interested in it. Math in general is a rather unpopular subject, and I'd wager that how it's taught has something to do with that. Students generally might find it a lot more interesting if they had such an understanding of it's basis, rather than treating it as merely something that has to be memorized for school. But anyway, sorry for getting off topic.Sonic Doctor said:I don't know about other students but I never questioned the rules behind the work, and geometry made plenty of sense to me, and I didn't have to learn that logic stuff.TWRule said:Teaching basic logic is stupid? It's valuable on it's own, and geometry is derived from logic. It will prepare them for college too, because critical thinking courses are generally required nowadays. I'd taken college courses that teach you exactly what he's learning now - he's better off learning it sooner, if possible. If you don't understand the basics of logical reasoning, the rest of geometry makes no sense - it seems like a collection of arbitrary rules to the student.Sonic Doctor said:I recommend you tell your teacher that what she is teaching is stupid, and isn't going to be used anywhere except inside the class. Tell her to actually teach geometry like teachers in other schools do.
I didn't care for math because it wasn't what I was going to be doing, but why question it when you do it with the rules in mind and get it right. So, I got it right, move onto the next problem.
Well, Humans invented Maths, and so, as humans are imperfect, we just have to assume that whatever calculations we're using are right, otherwise nothing gets done.Singletap said:I don't understand how the hole of math is a assumption, I have decided that using mathematics is the best way to determine reality which is the nothing less than the absolute truth of things. How can you assume the truth of something when you could be wrong, this makes it non absolute and pointless to consider as fact.Count Igor said:The whole of maths is pretty much assumption.
As is everything.
It could be that you'll get better anyway, so that would be true.
Also, how can you say that it is true. What if you got worse if you did take the medicine which would make it false. There is a %50 %50 chance there.
The first statement gives us a condition: that we take medication. It gives us a result: that you feel better. This is a coherent and logical statement (we have established a cause and an effect). The second statement does the same thing.Singletap said:"If you don't take your medicine then you'll feel better"
"If you don't take your medicine then you won't feel better"