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On 3/28/2025 4:50 PM, Richard Damon wrote:The problem is that your version of "semantics" is just incompatible with "Formal Logic".On 3/28/25 3:45 PM, olcott wrote:This can be incoherent unless complete semantics is fullyOn 3/28/2025 5:33 AM, joes wrote:>Am Thu, 27 Mar 2025 20:44:28 -0500 schrieb olcott:>On 3/27/2025 6:08 PM, Richard Damon wrote:>On 3/27/25 9:03 AM, olcott wrote:On 3/27/2025 5:58 AM, Mikko wrote:On 2025-03-26 18:01:14 +0000, olcott said:On 3/26/2025 3:36 AM, Mikko wrote:As soon as the first person knows new general knowledge and thisNo its not. We KNOW there are things we don't know yet, but hope to.The body of general knowledge that can be expressed using language isI am NOT referring to what is merely presented as the body of>
general knowledge, I am referring to the actual body of general
knowledge. Within this hypothesis it is easy to see that True(X)
would be infallible.
In that case your True(X) is uncomputable and any theory that
contains it is incomplete.
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defined to be complete. The moment that new knowledge that can be
expressed in language comes into existence it is added to the set.
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knowledge can be written down (unlike the actual direct physical
sensation of smelling a rose)
then this becomes an element of this set of knowledge.
>And, the base of a logic system is STATIC and fixed.The set of general knowledge that can be expressed in language has more
flexibility than that.
>You just don't understand the meaning of the words you are using.The set of all general knowledge that can be expressed in language is a
>True(X) merely tests for membership in this set;Which makes it not a TRUTH test, but a KNOWLEDGE test, and thus not
(a) Is X a Basic Fact? Then X is true.
names right.
subset of all truth and only excludes unknown and unknowable.Exactly, it doesn't include the unknown truths and ought to be called>
Known(X). It is also contradictory since it gives NO both for unknowns
and their negation.
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*The key defining aspect of knowledge is that it is true*
Which has been the eternal debate, how can we tell if some "fact" we have discovered is true.
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In FORMAL LOGIC (which you just dismissed) truth has a solid definition, and we can formally PROVE some statements to be true and formally PROVE that some statements are just false, and thus such statements CAN become truely established knowledge. There may also be some statements we have not established yet (and maybe can never establish in the system) which will remain as "unknown". That doesn't mean the statements might not be true or false, just that we don't know the answer yet.
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integrated into the formal system. There is no way that
applying ONLY truth preserving operations to basic facts
can possibly result in undecidability.
Only a valid concrete counter-example counts as a rebuttal,So, you admit that all your work is just a deception,
everything else counts as some sort of deception.
No, they are NOT stochastic as their basis, but are fully deterministic. Sometimes they will add a bit of randomness so they don't always give the same answer to a prompt, but the whole Neural Network is a finite determinstic computation. The input is parsed into predefined tokens with valueThey are currently stochastic. They can be anchored inWhen LLM systems have all of the basic facts encoded and>
are only allowed to perform truth preserving operations
on these basic facts:
(a) They won't be able to hallucinate
(b) They will have the basis to shut down the lies
of liars before these lies have any effect.
Since LLM are only approximation machines, that is totally NOT the results.
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a deterministic foundation. This allows the system to
divide its knowing into two (a) Logically true
(b) Reasonably plausible.
Which isn't a PROOF of the claim that there wasn't.And, only if the people you want to call liars have accepted your initial set of facts (which they won't), as almost all of the arguments are over interpretation of data, which is something that can not be logically difinitively proven.When people fully understand that there has never ever
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been any actual evidence of election fraud that could
have possibly changed the outcome of the 2020 presidential
election and this can be fully explained to them at their
own language level than many will begin to see the light.
And absence of proof is not proof of absence.Your problem has always been, it seems, that you just don't understand that fact, that basically ALL knowledge about the "real world" is either based on emperical observation, taken to be a "truth" because the vast majority accepts the conclusions from the observaitions, or isIt is a verified fact that there never has been any actual
evidence of election fraud that has ever been presented that
could have possibly changed the outcome of the 2020 presidential
election. If there ever was any then present it now or
implicitly acknowledge that you have always been lying.
definitional based upon agreed upon terminology. (So "Cats are Animals" can be true based upon an agreed upon meaning of the words coupled with the observation of in the world that the thing we think of as those terms matches our definitions.)
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Many big "breakthroughs" have been made when we realize a base assumption in our definitions about the world were incorrect.
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>>>>None of this makes any actual difference in the world.(b) Can X be derived by applying truth preserving operationsBut that isn't the membershop test you just mentioned, and it is that
to Basic Facts? Then X is true.
op[eration which Tarski specifically showed can not be done.
The problem is TRUTH can be establish via an infinite set of truth
perserving operations, but knowledge can not.
We won't be able to prevent nuclear Winter and the extinction of
humanity on the basis of knowing whether or not the Goldbach conjecture
is true.
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