Abstract
t is often suggested that truth-preservation is insufficient for
logical consequence, and that consequence needs to satisfy a further
condition of relevance. Premises and conclusion in a valid
consequence must be relevant to one another, and truth-preservation
is too coarse-grained a notion to guarantee that. Thus logical
consequence is the intersection of truth-preservation and relevance.
This situation has the absurd consequence that one might concede that
the conclusion of an argument was true (since the argument had true
premises and was truth-preserving); yet should refuse to infer the
conclusion from the premises, in the absence of demonstration of the
relevance of the premises to the conclusion.
The error lies in giving insufficient attention to the notion of
truth-preservation. Relevance is no separable ingredient in the
analysis of logical consequence, but a necessary condition of it.
What we show is that if an argument really is truth-preserving, then
that in itself is enough to show that the premises are (logically)
relevant to the conclusion.