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On 2025-03-16 14:38:16 +0000, olcott said:*It seems to me that you are dishonest abut that*
On 3/16/2025 8:19 AM, Mikko wrote:They don't say so in the above quoted text. What they do say is essentiallyOn 2025-03-15 17:15:39 +0000, olcott said:>
>On 3/11/2025 5:50 AM, Mikko wrote:>On 2025-03-11 03:23:51 +0000, olcott said:>
>On 3/10/2025 9:49 PM, dbush wrote:>On 3/10/2025 10:39 PM, olcott wrote:>On 3/10/2025 9:21 PM, Richard Damon wrote:>On 3/10/25 9:45 PM, olcott wrote:>On 3/10/2025 5:45 PM, Richard Damon wrote:>On 3/9/25 11:39 PM, olcott wrote:>>>
LP := ~True(LP) DOES SPECIFY INFINITE RECURSION.
WHich is irrelevent, as that isn't the statement in view, only what could be shown to be a meaning of the actual statement.
>
The Liar Paradox PROPERLY FORMALIZED <is> Infinitely recursive
thus semantically incorrect.
But is irrelevent to your arguement.
>
>>>
"It would then be possible to reconstruct the antinomy of the liar
in the metalanguage, by forming in the language itself a sentence"
Right, the "Liar" is in the METALANGUAGE, not the LANGUAGE where the predicate is defined.
>
You are just showing you don't understand the concept of Metalanguage.
>>>
Thus anchoring his whole proof in the Liar Paradox even if
you do not understand the term "metalanguage" well enough
to know this.
Yes, there is a connection to the liar's paradox, and that is that he shows that the presumed existance of a Truth Predicate forces the logic system to have to resolve the liar's paradox.
>
bool True(X)
{
if (~unify_with_occurs_check(X))
return false;
else if (~Truth_Bearer(X))
return false;
else
return IsTrue(X);
}
>
LP := ~True(LP)
True(LP) resolves to false.
~True(LP) resolves to true
It may seem that way if you fail to understand
Clocksin & Mellish explanation of
>
Most Prolog systems will allow you to
satisfy goals like:
equal(X, X).
?- equal(foo(Y), Y).
>
that is, they will allow you to match a
term against an uninstantiated subterm of itself.
>
ON PAGE 3
https://www.researchgate.net/ publication/350789898_Prolog_detects_and_rejects_pathological_self_reference_in_the_Godel_sentence
That you can quote some text but don't say anything about it supports the
hypthesis that you don't understand the text you quoted.
I said that unify_with_occurs_check() detects
cycles in the directed graph of the evaluation
sequence of an expression that does explain
everything even if it seems like I said
blah, blah, blah to everyone not knowing the
meaning of these words: "cycle", directed graph"
"evaluation sequence".
The above is irrelevant to the fact that you didn't say anothing about
the text you quoted.
>
LP := ~True(LP) expanded to infinite recursion
~True(~True(~True(~True(~True(~True(...))))))
The same way that Clocksin and Mellish do on their example
that you dishonestly keep ignoring.
what I have said in another context but not relevant here.
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