Liste des Groupes | Revenir à s logic |
On 5/5/25 11:31 AM, olcott wrote:When I told you that the system comprises the entireOn 5/5/2025 6:04 AM, Richard Damon wrote:Only because it seems to create a trivially small system.On 5/4/25 10:23 PM, olcott wrote:>When we define formal systems as a finite list of basic facts and allow semantic logical entailment as the only rule of inference we have systems that can express any truth that can be expressed in language.>
>
Also with such systems Undecidability is impossible. The only incompleteness are things that are unknown or unknowable.
Can such a system include the mathematics of the natural numbers?
>
If so, your claim is false, as that is enough to create that undeciability.
>
It seems to me that the inferences steps that could
otherwise create undecidability cannot exist in the
system that I propose.'
It does includes the mathematics of natural numbers>So?
For example: "This sentence is not true" cannot be
derived by applying semantic logical entailment to
basic facts. It is rejected as semantically unsound
on this basis.
>That isn't what I said. I said that you system, to be decidable, couldn't include the mathematics of the Natural Numbers.
Try to show any complete concrete example using
a system of basic facts and applying semantic logical
entailment where undecidability can be derived.
Les messages affichés proviennent d'usenet.