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On 5/11/2024 9:38 AM, Ross Finlayson wrote:In the logical, syntax "is" semantics.On 05/11/2024 01:18 AM, Jim Burns wrote:>>Date: Tue, 7 May 2024 15:16:27 -0400.Are there differences in syntax between>
'for.any' 'for.each' 'for.every' 'for.all' ?
If your answer, if it ever comes, is "no",
then I do not know what is meant byquantifier comprehension artifacts of the extra sortThat looks to me like
quantifiers used in several domains, full stop.
>
If your answer, if it ever comes, is "yes",
then I would like to know different how.
Syntax is pretty intimately entangled with semantics.
>
If your answer never comes,
why don't I just balk and clam up, because,
without it, I don't have much to say.Now of course such a notion or idea or concept or>
pensee or thought didn't just erupt fully-formed,
like Conrad from the tin of corned beef,
that it starts rather more like 'for-any, or, for-all',
about things like "for-any well-founded set, it's a set in
the well-founded universe", then, "for-all well-founded
or non-well-founded sets, they are sets in the set-theoretic
universal set".
>
Then, it's not necessary to invoke the entire universe of
sets, the entire domain of discourse that is anything that
is a set, though is reasonably brief when in a theory with
only logical sets, logically, sets of sets.
>
I.e., it applies as closely to "sets of sets", and the n'th order
about quantification, and comprehension.
>
>
Let's be clearly understood that I am a formalist,
if though not a nominalist yet a platonist,
because mathematics its truths are discovered
not invented, while our language and terms and
derivations are as yet technique.
>
So, constructivism is regarded as the rulial in
the standard, and intutionism is that which
revolves in the abductive inference, as what
makes for embracing the fuller dialectic.
>
Thusly, the "standard" is "our standard",
while what's of interest in the fuller dialectic
is the "extra-ordinary" or "super-standard",
that the "non-standard", must be in these
classes of classes, yet formalist, and rulial
again, in the competing regularities, which
comprise "it", the thing, the universe of the
mathematical and logical objects, a theory,
to which we attain, "A Theory", the theory,
of the things, the theory of every thing.
>
So, just saying, there's a greater mathematics
than "our standard", with "R, standard", and
modern mathematics as it's usually known,
a paleo-classical post-modern mathematics,
which mathematics owes physics for the
greater context of continuity, convergence,
and the laws of large numbers.
>
I'm a formalist: and in natural language.
Date: Tue, 7 May 2024 15:16:27 -0400.Are there differences in syntax between>
'for.any' 'for.each' 'for.every' 'for.all' ?
If your answer, if it ever comes, is "no",
then I do not know what is meant byquantifier comprehension artifacts of the extra sortThat looks to me like
quantifiers used in several domains, full stop.
>
If your answer, if it ever comes, is "yes",
then I would like to know different how.
Syntax is pretty intimately entangled with semantics.
>
If your answer never comes,
why don't I just balk and clam up, because,
without it, I don't have much to say.
>
So, it's door number 3.
>
>
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