• Martin Raza
    4
    Suppose T is a formal AI theory for Knowledge Representation. T contains a distinguished 1-place predicate symbol K (included in the Gödel numbering scheme), where K(┌Ф┐) is intended to formalize the idea that sentence Ф is known. Suppose further that the diagonal function is representable in the system, and that the logic of the knowledge predicate includes the general principles:
    (*) ⊢T K(┌Ф┐) → Ф , since knowledge is considered to be factive, and
    (**) if ⊢T Ф, then ⊢T K(┌Ф┐) , which is intended to capture the idea that if a statement is proven then it is known.
    How do we show that the resulting formal theory of Knowledge Representation is inconsistent.
  • fdrake
    5.9k
    Looks like a Tarski's undefinibility theorem problem. The strategy there will probably be using the diagonal lemma to set up a derivable contradiction using K as the truth predicate - since we have that K(phi) and phi are interderivable.
  • fishfry
    2.7k
    ┌Ф┐Martin Raza

    Attack of the killer robots?

    ┌Ф┐┌Ф┐┌Ф┐┌Ф┐┌Ф┐┌Ф┐┌Ф┐┌Ф┐┌Ф┐
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