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On 2/7/2025 4:34 AM, Mikko wrote:That's right. That limited area should be called "number theory",On 2025-02-06 14:46:55 +0000, olcott said:When one thinks of math as only pertaining to numbers then math
On 2/6/2025 2:02 AM, Mikko wrote:No, I did not paraphrase anything.On 2025-02-05 16:03:21 +0000, olcott said:You paraphrased what I said incorrectly.
On 2/5/2025 1:44 AM, Mikko wrote:Yes, but you didn't claim that.On 2025-02-04 16:11:08 +0000, olcott said:That mathematical incompleteness coherently exists <is> claim.
On 2/4/2025 3:22 AM, Mikko wrote:Mathematical incompleteness is not a claim so it cannot be untrue.On 2025-02-03 16:54:08 +0000, olcott said:It is untrue because it is misunderstood.
On 2/3/2025 9:07 AM, Mikko wrote:The title line means that something is misunderstood but that somethingOn 2025-02-03 03:30:46 +0000, olcott said:The notion of truth is entailed by the subject line:
On 2/2/2025 3:27 AM, Mikko wrote:Irrelevant as the subject line does not mention truth.On 2025-02-01 14:09:54 +0000, olcott said:The fundamental base meaning of Truth[0] itself remains the same
On 2/1/2025 3:19 AM, Mikko wrote:We require that terms of art are used with their term-of-art meaning andOn 2025-01-31 13:57:02 +0000, olcott said:a fact or piece of information that shows that something
On 1/31/2025 3:24 AM, Mikko wrote:And well undeerstood. The claim on the subject line is false.On 2025-01-30 23:10:18 +0000, olcott said:This is well known.
Within the entire body of analytical truth any expression of language that has no sequence of formalized semantic deductive inference steps from the formalized semantic foundational truths of this system are simply untrue in this system. (Isomorphic to provable from axioms).If there is a misconception then you have misconceived something. It is well
known that it is possible to construct a formal theory where some formulas
are neither provble nor disprovable.
exists or is true:
https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/proof
no matter what idiomatic meanings say.
Therefore, no need to revise my initial comment.
misconception means ~True.
is not the meaning of "true".
The closest that it can possibly be interpreted as true wouldMath is not intentionally incomplete.
be that because key elements of proof[0] have been specified
as not existing in proof[math] math is intentionally made less
than complete.
Proof[math] was defined to have less capability than Proof[0].That is not a part of the definition but it is a consequence of the
definition. Much of the lost capability is about things that are
outside of the scope of mathemiatics and formal theories.
is inherently very limited.
When one applies something likeIt is not possible to specify every detail of a natural language.
Montague Grammar to formalize every detail of natural language
semantics then math takes on much more scope.
When we see this then we see "incompleteness" is a mere artificialHallucinations are possible but only proofs count in mathematics.
contrivance.
True(x) always means that a connection to a semanticMathematics does not make anything about "True(x)". Some branches care
truthmaker exists. When math does this differently it is simply
breaking the rules.
There are no semantic connections between uninterpreted strings.All of the rules of correct reasoning (correcting the errors ofThen you cannot have all the advantages of formal logic. In particular,Many theories are incomplete,I am integrating the semantics into the evaluation as its full context.
intertionally or otherwise, but they don't restrict the rest of math.
But there are areas of matheimatics that are not yet studied.
When-so-ever any expression of formal or natural language X lacksAn expresion can be true in one interpretation and false in another.
a connection to its truthmaker X remains untrue.
you need to be able to apply and verify formally invalid inferences.
formal logic) are merely semantic connections between finite strings:
When one finite string expression of language is known to be trueOnly if they are connected with (semantic or other) connections that
other expressions are know to be semantically entailed.
Which is hard to show without the full support of formal logic.It all has always boiled down to semantic entailment.When we do this and require an expression of formal or natural languageMaybe, maybe not. Without the full support of formal logic it is hard to
to have a semantic connection to its truthmaker then true[0] cannot
exist apart from provable[0].
prove. An unjustified faith does not help.
Math does not care how truth works outside mathematics. But the truthWe could equally define a "dead cat" to be a kind of {cow}.True[math] can only exist apart from Provable[math] withinIf you want that to be true you need to define True[math] differently
the narrow minded, idiomatic use of these terms. This is
NOT the way that True[0] and Provable[0] actually work.
from the way "truth" is used by mathimaticians.
Math does not get to change the way that truth really works,
when math tries to do this math is incorrect.
Many philosophers before and after Tarski have tried to find out whatTarski is the foremost author of the whole notion of everyMy point is much more clear when we see that Tarski attemptsTarski did not attempt to show that True[0] is undefinable. He showed
to show that True[0] is undefinable.
https://liarparadox.org/Tarski_247_248.pdf
https://liarparadox.org/Tarski_275_276.pdf
quite successfully that arthmetic truth is undefinable. Whether that
proof applies to your True[0] is not yet determined.
kind of truth. "snow is white" because within the actual state
of affairs the color of snow is perceived by humans to be white.
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