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  • (intro music)

  • My name is Justin Khoo,

  • and I am an assistant professor[br]of philosophy at MIT.

  • Today we are going to[br]look at conditionals,

  • which are a class of sentences

  • that have puzzled philosophers[br]for thousands of years.

  • Here's an example of a[br]conditional sentence from a speech

  • by former presidential[br]candidate, Mitt Romney:

  • "If the safety net needs[br]repair, I will fix it."

  • Conditional sentences, like[br](1), consist of two parts:

  • an antecedent ("the[br]safety net needs repair")

  • and a consequent ("I will fix it").

  • Our question today is

  • "What do conditional[br]sentences, like (1), mean?"

  • In other words, by uttering this sentence,

  • what has Mitt Romney told us?

  • Here's a way to think about[br]questions of meaning like this.

  • When I say, "The cat is on the mat,"

  • I tell you that the cat is on the mat,

  • rather than not on the mat.

  • This is because the meaning of (2) is

  • that the cat is on the mat.

  • Okay, that's pretty easy.

  • What about our conditional sentence (1)?

  • What has Mitt Romney[br]told us by uttering it?

  • One way of figuring out[br]what Romney has told us

  • is to get clear on what[br]he has not told us.

  • He hasn't told us that the[br]safety net needs repair,

  • and he also hasn't told us that[br]he will fix the safety net.

  • Rather, what he said is that[br]there is some connection

  • between the safety net needing[br]repair and his fixing it.

  • But what connection?

  • Here's a simple answer.

  • By saying the sentence (1),

  • Romney has told us that it is not the case

  • that the safety net needs[br]repair and he won't fix it.

  • Equivalently, he said that

  • either the safety net doesn't need repair,

  • or that he will fix it.

  • Let's call this theory the[br]"material conditional theory."

  • Philosophers at least as far back

  • as the Hellenistic philosopher

  • Philo of Megara have been[br]attracted to this theory

  • about what conditionals mean.

  • In order to state the[br]material conditional theory

  • more precisely, we will[br]make use of a device

  • from logic called a "truth table."

  • A truth table is a way of representing

  • how the truth of a complex sentence,

  • in this case, the conditional (1),

  • depends on the truth values of its parts,

  • in this case, the antecedent[br]and consequent of (1).

  • Let's start with a simple[br]example of a conjunction.

  • Take this sentence:

  • "The cat is on the mat,[br]and the cat is fat."

  • Naturally, someone who says[br]this tells you two things:

  • that the cat is on the mat,[br]and that the cat is fat.

  • Thus, the sentence (3) is true

  • if both the cat is on the[br]mat and the cat is fat,

  • and false if either the[br]cat isn't on the mat

  • or the cat isn't fat.

  • We draw this dependence of the truth value

  • of the whole sentence on its parts

  • in our truth table as follows,

  • noting "T" for true when[br]the sentence is true,

  • and "F" for false when[br]the sentence is false.

  • Notice that, since we want to represent

  • how the truth value of (3)

  • depends on the truth values of its parts,

  • the first two columns contain[br]every possible combination

  • of assigning either "T" or[br]"F" to the parts of (3).

  • Furthermore, notice (3) only has a "T"

  • in the row where both[br]of its parts have "T"s.

  • This captures the fact[br]that conjunctions are true

  • only if both of their conjuncts are true,

  • and false otherwise.

  • It also captures the fact that (3)

  • tells us both that the cat is on the mat

  • and that the cat is fat,

  • since that is the only condition[br]under which it is true.

  • Okay, so now what about our[br]conditional sentence (1)?

  • According to the material[br]conditional theory,

  • one tells us that it is not the case

  • that the safety net needs[br]repair and Romney won't fix it.

  • So, in our truth table, we assign "F"

  • to the conditional only on row two,

  • where it is true that the[br]safety net needs repair

  • and false that Romney will fix it.

  • We assign "T" to it on all other rows.

  • This assignment of[br]truth values, therefore,

  • entirely captures the meaning[br]of the conditional (1)

  • according to the material[br]conditional theory.

  • Now, although the material[br]conditional theory

  • has been endorsed by many philosophers,

  • it faces several difficult challenges.

  • You might have noticed that,[br]according to the theory,

  • the sentence (1) is true in all rows

  • besides the second.

  • Does this seem right to you?

  • In the next video, we will[br]explore some challenges

  • facing the material conditional theory,

  • and see how some other theories

  • about what conditionals[br]mean may fare better.

  • Subtitles by the Amara.org community

(intro music)

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