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On 3/30/2025 4:57 AM, Mikko wrote:You have never expressed any disagreement with the starting points ofOn 2025-03-29 14:06:17 +0000, olcott said:Mere more verbose way of saying the same thing.
On 3/29/2025 5:20 AM, Mikko wrote:He didn't say that True(X) cannot be defined. He proved that no definitionOn 2025-03-28 19:59:16 +0000, olcott said:Yes of course there are no known facts it might be the case
On 3/28/2025 7:12 AM, Mikko wrote:Unless you want to exclude uncertain facts the set of know facts isOn 2025-03-28 01:04:45 +0000, olcott said:A list of sentences would not make for efficient processing.
On 3/27/2025 5:48 AM, Mikko wrote:First one should define what the elements of that set could be.On 2025-03-26 17:58:10 +0000, olcott said:Reverse-engineer how you could define a set of
On 3/26/2025 3:39 AM, Mikko wrote:What is "general" intended to mean here? In absense of any definitionOn 2025-03-26 02:15:26 +0000, olcott said:Only general knowledge
On 3/25/2025 8:08 PM, Richard Damon wrote:We already know that many expressions of language that have the semanticOn 3/25/25 10:56 AM, olcott wrote:*This is a good first guess*On 3/25/2025 5:19 AM, Mikko wrote:How do you DEFINE what is actually knowledge?On 2025-03-22 17:53:28 +0000, olcott said:What is taken to be knowledge might possibly be false.
On 3/22/2025 11:43 AM, Mikko wrote:And human knowledge is not.On 2025-03-21 12:49:06 +0000, olcott said:tautology, in logic, a statement so framed that
On 3/21/2025 3:57 AM, Mikko wrote:The set of human knowledge that can be expressed using languageOn 2025-03-20 15:02:42 +0000, olcott said:The set of all human general knowledge that can
On 3/20/2025 8:09 AM, Mikko wrote:However, it is possible that someone finds a proof of the conjectureOn 2025-03-20 02:42:53 +0000, olcott said:Likewise there currently does not exist any finite
It is stipulated that analytic knowledge is limited to theA simple example is the first order group theory.
set of knowledge that can be expressed using language or
derived by applying truth preserving operations to elements
of this set.
When we begin with a set of basic facts and all inferenceThere is no computable predicate that tells whether a sentence
is limited to applying truth preserving operations to
elements of this set then a True(X) predicate cannot possibly
be thwarted.
of the first order group theory can be proven.
proof that the Goldbach Conjecture is true or false
thus True(GC) is a type mismatch error.
or its negation. Then the predicate True is no longer complete.
be expressed using language gets updated.
When we begin with basic facts and only apply truth preservingWhen we redefine logic systems such that they beginHowever, it is possible (and, for sufficiently powerful sysems, certain)
with set of basic facts and are only allowed to
apply truth preserving operations to these basic
facts then every element of the system is provable
on the basis of these truth preserving operations.
that the provability is not computable.
to the giant semantic tautology of the set of human knowledge
that can be expressed using language then every element in this
set is reachable by these same truth preserving operations.
is not a tautology.
it cannot be denied without inconsistency.
What actually <is> knowledge is impossibly false by
definition.
The set of expressions of language that have the
semantic property of true that are written down
somewhere.
proerty of true are not written down anywhere.
it is too vague to really mean anything.
knowledge that is finite rather than infinite.
If sentences, and there are not too many of them, a set of knowledge
could be presented as a book that contains those sentences and nothing
else.
small, probably empty. If you include many uncertain facts then
almost certainly your True(X) is true for some false X.
that feline kittens have always been 15 story office buildings
and we have been deluded into thinking differently.
When Tarski said True(X) cannot be defined, he is proved wrong.A knowledge ontology inheritance hierarchy is most efficient.A good example is Newtonial mchanics, which is known to be wrong but is
However, there could be no uncertain sentences as they are not knownScientific theories would be uncertain truth.
(sensu Olcotti).
It is a known fact that X evidence seems to make Y
a reasonably plausible possibility.
useful and used for practical purposes. How should your True(X) handle
that?
Understanding that Tarski has been refuted hardly counts as understandingWe can use it right now to understand that TarskiThe set of everything that anyone ever wroteBut not knowable.
down would be finite.
Most of this would beBut we can't use it.
specific knowledge Pete's dog was named Bella.
Some is general dogs are animals.
We can know that the set of general knowledge that canNo, but your "the set of expressions of language that have the semanticAe also know that many expressions of language that are written downFalse statements do not count as knowledge.
somewhere lack the semantic property of true.
property of true that are written down somewhere" is not useful because
there is no way to know that set.
possibly be written down (formerly the analytic aspect
of the analytic/synthetic distinction) exists without
enumerating its elements.
has been refuted and that True(X) does exist for
a specific and crucially relevant domain.
as Tarstki has not been refuted.
defines a predicate that tells whether a sentence is true.
If you rejectSince this <is> my own design, I do not reject it.
the idea that a sentence derived from true sentences with turth preserving
transformations is always true then you may disagree.
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