Recall that in the definition of [deductive validity](/Logic/General_concepts/Validity_and_entailment.md#validity) we do not say: an argument is valid iff if the premises _are true_ and the conclusion _is true_. We say _if it is possible for the premises to be true_. This is important: we are not interested in the actual truth of the premises or the conclusion.
The difference here is that the premises happen to be true and, given that the argument is valid, the conclusion must also be true. What we have defined here is **soundness**: the argument is said to be sound as well as valid. This is an additional and stronger criterion of evaluation.
We must not forget that truth alone is not the sole condition for soundness. We can have arguments whose conclusion and premises are all true without the argument being sound:
This argument is valid because we cannot consistently assert the premises and deny the conclusion. In either case, the conclusion can be said to follow from the premises. The problem is that we cannot consistently assert both premises: it is not possible for both propositions to be true at the same time.