Being interested in different forms of relativism, I am interested in logical paradoxes and tonight watched a video on Godel. — Gregory
From what I know, his incompleteness proofs are very dependent on the use of human language. — Gregory
I am not sure there can't be an intelligent life form, following what Quine wrote on that, which couldn't, if it thought purely in numbers, prove to itself all of mathematics. — Gregory
Such an ideal might be impossible for a human, but if Spinoza were right God is closer us than we are to ourselves, — Gregory
ergo if we are God we could prove all of mathematics. — Gregory
At least that is how I see it, because relativism for me is such that the relative is in Becoming, never in the Absolute. — Gregory
Now as for sets, each one can be considered nominally as a succession of units — Gregory
or taken as a whole so that it includes itself. — Gregory
I think of the latter as including the nature of the set. — Gregory
The set of all sets that do not contain themselves would be a series, maybe infinite, of individual units. — Gregory
The set of all sets that do contain themselves likewise does not require that a set contain and not contain itself. — Gregory
It would have merely all the individuals in addition to their groupings. — Gregory
But I am open to relativism in mathematics and if someone has a proof of it i'd be interested. — Gregory
Godel seemed to mesh language with numbers so tightly that Becoming seemed to enter mathematics. — Gregory
However, the Absolute in my opinion must be consistent with proving everything logically and mathematically. — Gregory
Maybe I am entering Leibnizian territory, — Gregory
but I find this topic to taste like steel and I like it. — Gregory
If we understand ambiguity in language, I don't see how Godel or Russell could prove that contradiction lies in the heart of numbers — Gregory
The set of all sets that do contain themselves likewise does not require that a set contain and not contain itself. It would have merely all the individuals in addition to their groupings. — Gregory
When I read this I thought "that is how I feel about mathematics!" and I went on to read a book about Post Modernism and Mathematics, and now I am in the middle of another book called Why is There a Philosophy of Mathematics at All. — Gregory
Thanks for the detailed response. The videos I've seen on Godel is the In Our Time one from philosophyoverdose and the ones from actualized.org, all on Youtube. I was under the impression that Godel used the ambiguity of the Liar Paradox to formulate codes in mathematics. This reminded me of Russell's paradox. In common language "The set of all sets that do not contain themselves" would contain itself if it didn't contain itself. A set containing itself would be very strange though and I don't think this paradox is a contradiction in numbers but in language. IF Godel's theorems were based on language, then they could be revised like Russells theorem. A fault in language should have no effect on numbers. I did say God (whether we are God or not) should be able to prove everything in mathematics. Self reference might be an illegal move in mathematics and could possibly be godel's problem. I don't know. Actualized.org had a video on relativism and mentions a Quine paper from the 20's where he discusses talking with aliens. Godel, being a Platonist, is setting up a whole theory he thinks is true for all species and divinities for all time. But an alien might have a numbering system wherein there is no self reference. As a genuine question, is it possible Godel put too much of human language into mathematics? — Gregory
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