Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑November 19th, 2021, 8:22 amThis appears to be your logical reasoning which creates coherence with your "conceptual framing". It may also be seen as a "translation".stevie wrote: ↑November 19th, 2021, 3:04 am In terms of "How does logic work?" I'd prefer a 'coherence model' for the explanation of the persuasiveness of logic: A logical reasoning appears to be persuasive if - and only if - it fits into the body of already established beliefs and assumptions. "the body of already established beliefs and assumptions" may also be called "conceptual framing" and is the basis for any kind of apprehension and affirmative thought formation preceding verbal expression.At first I thought you were linking logic to orthodoxy, which seems to me to be an unnecessary constraint on logic and its definition. A little more thought persuaded me that you're linking it to context, which makes a lot more sense (to me). This fits with the everyday use of "the logic of X" to mean either
the reasoning that leads to X, or
the reasoning that follows from X.
This relates X, and the logic associated with it, to the context within which X exists. This may be a somewhat woolly use of the term "logic", but it fits with what you have suggested. Relating logic and context makes a lot of sense when seen in this way. So the detailed logic that applies to X depends on X itself, and on X's context. For Y, the logic will differ, maybe a lot, maybe very little. Like much of the universe, it depends on context. I like this perspective on logic.