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St. Augustine
On Christian Doctrine
IntraText CT - Text
BOOK II.
chap. 33. False inferences may be drawn from valid seasonings, and vice versa
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chap
.
33
.
False
inferences
may
be
drawn
from
valid
seasonings
,
and
vice
versa
In
this
passage
,
however
,
where
the
argument
is
about
the
resurrection
,
both
the
law
of
the
inference
is
valid
,
and
the
conclusion
arrived
at
is
true
.
But
in
the
case
of
false
conclusions
,
too
,
there
is
a
validity
of
inference
in
some
such
way
as
the
following
.
Let
us
suppose
some
man
to
have
admitted
:
If
a
snail
is
an
animal
,
it
has
a
voice
.
This
being
admitted
,
then
,
when
it
has
been
proved
that
the
snail
has
no
voice
,
it
follows
(
since
when
the
consequent
is
proved
false
,
the
antecedent
is
also
false
)
that
the
snail
is
not
an
animal
.
Now
this
conclusion
is
false
,
but
it
is
a
true
and
valid
inference
from
the
false
admission
.
Thus
,
the
truth
of
a
statement
stands
on
its
own
merits
;
the
validity
of
an
inference
depends
on
the
statement
or
the
admission
of
the
man
with
whom
one
is
arguing
.
And
thus
,
as
I
said
above
,
a
false
inference
may
be
drawn
by
a
valid
process
of
reasoning
,
in
order
that
he
whose
error
we
wish
to
correct
may
be
sorry
that
he
has
admitted
the
antecedent
,
when
he
sees
that
its
logical
consequences
are
utterly
untenable
.
And
hence
it
is
easy
to
understand
that
as
the
inferences
may
be
valid
where
the
opinions
are
false
,
so
the
inferences
may
be
unsound
where
the
opinions
are
true
.
For
example
,
suppose
that
a
man
propounds
the
statement
, "
If
this
man
is
just
,
he
is
good
,"
and
we
admit
its
truth
.
Then
he
adds
, "
But
he
is
not
just
;"
and
when
we
admit
this
too
,
he
draws
the
conclusion
, "
Therefore
he
is
not
good
."
Now
although
every
one
of
these
statements
may
be
true
,
still
the
principle
of
the
inference
is
unsound
.
For
it
is
not
true
that
,
as
when
the
consequent
is
proved
false
the
antecedent
is
also
false
,
so
when
the
antecedent
is
proved
false
the
consequent
is
false
.
For
the
statement
is
true
, "
If
he
is
an
orator
,
he
is
a
man
."
But
if
we
add
, "
He
is
not
an
orator
,"
the
consequence
does
not
follow
, "
He
is
not
a
man
."
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