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On 3/2/2025 1:13 PM, dbush wrote:That doesn't change the fact that Robinson arithmetic contains the true statement "no number is equal to its successor" that has *only* an infinite connection to the axioms (i.e. the truthmakers) of the system.On 3/2/2025 2:11 PM, olcott wrote:When formal systems can be defined in such a way that they are notOn 3/2/2025 1:04 PM, dbush wrote:>On 3/2/2025 1:57 PM, olcott wrote:>On 3/2/2025 12:22 PM, dbush wrote:>On 3/2/2025 1:10 PM, olcott wrote:>On 3/2/2025 11:19 AM, dbush wrote:>On 3/2/2025 12:14 PM, olcott wrote:>On 3/2/2025 11:11 AM, dbush wrote:>On 3/2/2025 12:08 PM, olcott wrote:>On 3/2/2025 11:00 AM, dbush wrote:>On 3/2/2025 11:53 AM, olcott wrote:>On 3/2/2025 10:28 AM, dbush wrote:>>> So how does changing the definition of truth prevent systems from>existing that contain true statements that have *only* an infinite connection to their truthmaker?>
*This <is> how actual truth has always worked*
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If expression X has a connection to a truth-maker then
X is true otherwise X is untrue, yet possibly not false.
It does not matter what kind of connection this is.
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You didn't answer the question.
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Sure I did
>> It does not matter what kind of connection this is.
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It does not matter whether the connection is infinite
or not so STFU about it.
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Dishonest dodge.
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You stated that your definition of truth prevents systems from existing that contain true statements that have *only* an infinite connection to their truthmaker.
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So how does that happen?
I never said anything like that.
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Yes you did:
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On 3/1/2025 11:46 PM, olcott wrote:
> Incompleteness cannot possibly exist when true means
> has a truth-maker and untrue means has no truth-maker
> and false mean ~X has a truth-maker.
Your paraphrase of that was terribly incorrect.
Has a truth-maker has always been the only correct
way to determine True(x) superseding and replacing
the ill-formed notion of provability.
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I merely substituted the term "incompleteness" with it's official definition. That you don't understand that definition is not a rebuttal.
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That you attempted to change the idea of "provability" doesn't change the fact that "incompleteness" still refers to the original idea of "provability".
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A system is incomplete if it contains one or more true statements that contain *only* an infinite connection to their truthmakers.
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That doesn't change despite your idea of "truth", so incompleteness still exists.
One can define a system of arithmetic that does not allow
summing the integers 5 and 3. Such a system would be
incomplete as an artificial contrivance.
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The notions of undecidability and incompleteness are this
same sort of artificial contrivance.
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That's not what incompleteness means.
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For example, Robinson arithmetic is incomplete because the true statement "no number is equal to its successor" has *only* an infinite connection to its truthmaker.
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That is a ridiculously stupid thing to say and you know it.
I may not be alive in a month. Quit f-cking around with
my life's work.
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That you don't know the definition of the terms you're using is not a rebuttal.
incomplete and undecidability cannot occur it is stupid to define
them differently.
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