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On 7/6/24 9:56 PM, olcott wrote:then True(L,x) evaluates to false ultimately meaningOn 7/6/2024 8:32 PM, Richard Damon wrote:So if x is defined in L as ~True(L, x)On 7/6/24 9:06 PM, olcott wrote:*That is not the way it works in my system or Prolog*On 7/6/2024 6:28 PM, Richard Damon wrote:>On 7/6/24 6:41 PM, olcott wrote:>On 7/6/2024 5:22 PM, Richard Damon wrote:>On 7/6/24 6:08 PM, olcott wrote:>On 7/6/2024 4:02 PM, Richard Damon wrote:>The problem here is you logic doesn't actually allow for the necessaery references in it.Not at all. My logic is simply smart enough to reject
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non-truth-bearers AKA expressions that are not valid
propositions. It does not stupidly falsely assume that
every expression is a valid proposition.\
Logic isn't "Smart", it follows its rules.
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Your rules are just inconsistent.
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When-so-ever true means provable and false means not provable
the meaning of these words proves that such a system cannot
get stuck in pathological expressions.
And such a definition requires the system to be keep simple or it becomes inconsistant.
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LP := ~True(LP) has a cycle in the directed
graph of the elements of the expression related
to each other that Prolog and MTT detects.
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So, what value does True(LP) return?
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True(L,x) means x is true.
~True(L,x) means x is untrue which includes false and not a proposition.
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True(L,~x) means x is false.
~True(L,~x) means x is unfalse which includes true and not a proposition.
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True(L,LP) is false and True(L,~LP) is false which means LP
is not a proposition.
And if x is defined in L as ~True(L,x) means that True(L, x) is false, then x being the negation of that result is a true statement.
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~True(L, x) means x is either false or not a proposition
~True(L, ~x) means x is either true or not a proposition
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Try reading those two lines 150 more times and maybe it will
break through your ADD. Alternatively you are simply a liar.
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It is something like trivalent logic {true, false, incorrect}
~true is false or incorrect.
~false is true or incorrect.
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what value does True(L, x) have?
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