Tamara224
Well-Known Member
You're the one hung up on assumptions and inferences. I'm simply pointing out that this is not an assumption at all.

That's not an inference. It's a mathematical fact that if A=B and B=C that A=C.
Nope. It's a mathematical deduction. A, B and C are the "facts". Any time you express something in the form of an equation, you are deducing (i.e. inferring).
In geometry, those aren't called "assumptions". They're called "givens", because, well, they're given to you.
And you assume that a given is true for the sake of the proof. It's 'given' to you and not proven so you assume that it is true without demanding proof.
To assume means "to take for granted". "Granted" and "given" are the same thing.
So, to assume means to "take as a given."
To quote you, "nonsense".
As a programmer, I use if/then constructs every day. I CAN NOT make assumptions about the "if" construct without "proving" them, or I would have no logical control over the flow of the program.
In a more practical sense, if I measure a board, and that board is 4' long, and then I measure another board, and that board is also 4' long, I have "proven" that the boards are 4' long. If I then measure a third board that is also 4' long, it requires no "assumption" that it is the same length as both of the other 2 boards.
Still missing the key point. An assumption doesn't stop being an assumption just because it's proven later or earlier. Whenever you rely on the fact to build an equation or to prove something else, you are assuming it to be true.
An assumption need not be based on arbitrary, capricious or imaginary facts in order to be an assumption.
Yes. Particularly so since you got off on this "assumption" tangent.
Going off on a tangent is not what being obtuse means, Pete.
Indeed.
If you want to obfuscate the point that it was wrong for Michal to despise David in her heart and strive over the exact meaning of words, you are free to do so. It's pretty clear to most people though, without the need for any dissertation on the proper use and/or application of the words "assumption" and "inference".
So what's your point as it pertains to this discussion? Do you have one, or do you just want us to recognize and praise you for your intellectual prowess and masterful use of the terms "assumption" and "inference"?
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My point is clear. I'm not obfuscating anything. IMHO, you just don't like admitting that you make as many assumptions as the next person.
My point is that it's not explicitly stated in the text that it was wrong for Michal to despise her husband.
That point is being read into the text (i.e. assumed).
Like I've said half a dozen times now. I don't disagree that she was wrong to do so. I do disagree, however, with the idea that you appear to be suggesting that such is the main point of the passage.
I also don't disagree with Jimbo that David was wrong to treat her the way he did. That's also an inference based on assumptions that I bring to the text from elsewhere in Scripture (i.e. that husbands are supposed to love their wives).
I'm not looking for praise. I find it rather interesting that you resort to ad hominem now, though. You know what they say about the first person to resort to ad hominem...
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