In logic, we call premises the initial ideas of an argument, from which it is possible to reach a conclusion.
What happens is that when one of the premises is false, the conclusion will necessarily be false as well.
Imagine a structure like this, with two premises and a conclusion:
- Premise 1: Programming with code is out of reach
- Premise 2: To digitize our company, we have to program with code.
- Conclusion: Digitising our business is not within our reach
I hope that by now you have realized that this is a false conclusion based on a false premise (the first one).
In this video, I try to disprove this first premise and, consequently, also the conclusion.