What the Tortoise Said to Achilles |
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"What the Tortoise Said to Achilles" is a brief dialog by Lewis Carroll which playfully problematizes the foundations of logic. The conversation takes place between the tortoise and Achilles, the two runners in Zeno's racecourse paradox. The tortoise challenges Achilles to use the force of logic to convince him that a particular deductive inference of the modus ponens variety is a valid argument. Ultimately, Achilles fails, because the clever tortoise leads him into an infinite regression.
The discussion concerns three statements:
which could be formalized with mathematical symbols as:
Achilles' task is to make the Tortoise agree that, if he accepts A and B, he must necessarily accept Z. The Tortoise sees no particularly good reason to agree to this, but takes it up as an additional premise C in order to humor Achilles:
Achilles argues that because the Tortoise now accepts A, B, and C, he must now necessarily accept Z. The Tortoise sees no particularly good reason to agree to this, but takes it up as an additional premise D in order to humor Achilles:
Ultimately, the Tortoise grows the list of premises ad infinitum, and never accepts the conclusion Z.
What's wrong hereThe tortoise doesn't acknowledge modus ponens as a generally valid argument form. Carroll demonstrates the great difficulty of deducing modus ponens from premises that do not include modus ponens. This suggests that, more generally, valid logical argument forms cannot be derived "from nothing". ... Several philosophers have tried to resolve the Carroll paradox. Isashiki Takahiro (1999) summarizes past attempts and concludes they all fail before beginning yet another.
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