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On 3/19/25 10:42 PM, olcott wrote:True(X) always returns TRUE for every element in the setIt is stipulated that analytic knowledge is limited to theWhich just means that you have stipulated yourself out of all classical logic, since Truth is different than Knowledge. In a good logic system, Knowledge will be a subset of Truth, but you have defined that in your system, Truth is a subset of Knowledge, so you have it backwards.
set of knowledge that can be expressed using language or
derived by applying truth preserving operations to elements
of this set.
In fact, your definition impllies a possibility that there may be some Knowledge that isn't True, depending on how you parse your definition.Knowledge is defined to be TRUE.
It is not at all worthless. It can prove that climate change is>Only because you have defined Truth to be limited to knowledge, and thus made your "Logic System" worthless, as it can be used to find out something new.
When we begin with a set of basic facts and all inference
is limited to applying truth preserving operations to
elements of this set then a True(X) predicate cannot possibly
be thwarted.
>
This has always been your problem, you confuse the concept of actual Truth, with includes statements which might not be know, or can even be unknowable, with the limited concept of what is known.Unknown things are outside of the scope of any True(X)
Note, in REAL logic systems, Truth can be established via infinite length chains of reasoning steps,All of these otherwise infinite proofs are compressed using
while knowledge requires a finite chain (since we are finite, we can't 'know' something only learnable via an infinite path).Show me how you actually know right now how the Goldbach
Sorry, you are just proving how stupid you actually are.
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