barmar, on 2012-February-09, 10:39, said:
But many people who believe would probably say otherwise. Who gets to dictate what's logical?
I chose the example I did because there are plenty of people with conflicting beliefs out there and it can not therefore be appropriate to attach "logical" to one belief position (ie a matter of faith, without evidential support) without being prepared to do so to the other. And then you get logical contradiction; so "logical" it wasn't.
[This is entirely without prejudice to any religious beliefs, or lack of them, that I or any other posters may hold, about which I am saying nothing whatsoever.]
barmar, on 2012-February-09, 10:39, said:
Actually, the use of "logical" for this discussion is fundamentally different from using it in a pure mathematical or scientific context. Bridge scoring is not something you can decide the truth or falsity of. You may be able to decide whether it's fair.
I don't know what you mean about the truth or falsity of bridge scoring, but it's certainly something about which you can say what is mathematically appropriate. I find the thrust of bluejack's argument very strange - it's precisely on such technical matters that ordinary players expect the regulatory authorities to take a lead and sort out the relevant technical issues on their behalf. Instead, he wants to abdicate that leadership role, apparently on the grounds that "100,000 lemmings can't be wrong". [And before anyone goes there, I'm fully aware of the questions about the veracity of lemming suicide.]
barmar, on 2012-February-09, 10:39, said:
However, in this particular case, I think logical is being used to mean "reasonable" -- in that case, belief is an appropriate way to judge it. Or it could mean "consistent with similar forms of the game", and then you have to decide how important this is.
Indeed. So use "reasonable" or "sensible" and don't go on arguing that "logical" is right.