Because first, Gödelian incompleteness does not apply to physical theories. — fishfry
What is the relation between Godel’s theorem and whether we can formulate the theory of the universe in terms of a finite number of principles? One connection is obvious. According to the positivist philosophy of science, a physical theory is a mathematical model. So if there are mathematical results that can not be proved, there are physical problems that can not be predicted. — Stephen Hawking, Gödel and the end of physics
It applies (loosely speaking) to axiomatic systems of a particular logical structure, that support mathematical induction. Secondly, incompleteness is not a statement about mathematical truth. It's a statement about axiomatic theories. — fishfry
Presburger arithmetic is an axiom system for the natural numbers under addition. It is both consistent and complete. Gödel's theorem applies to the theories of Peano arithmetic (PA) and primitive recursive arithmetic (PRA), but not to Presburger arithmetic. — Wikipedia on the completeness of arithmetic
As mentioned above, Henkin proved that the standard deductive system for first-order logic is sound, complete, and effective for second-order logic with Henkin semantics, and the deductive system with comprehension and choice principles is sound, complete, and effective for Henkin semantics using only models that satisfy these principles. — Wikipedia on the possibility of completeness in the context of second-order logic
As long as the theory is consistent, then, one can always add new axioms to the theory to expand its power and magnitude. — Wallows
We make models of reality, for example mathematical formulas that portray some aspect of the complex reality around us. — ssu
We make models of reality, for example mathematical formulas that portray some aspect of the complex reality around us. Fine, but the problem of subjectivity comes with when that model itself has an impact on what it's modelling. Then it has to model itself into the model. Now you might argue that this can be still modeled and in many cases it surely can be, but not when the 'correct' answer is something that the model doesn't give. — ssu
Or social sciences, like economics.If you make a model of reality, then you are engaged in an empirical discipline (such as science). — alcontali
Uh, the math used in the models have to be correct. Yes, math used as a tool (as you point yourself also), but just as all tools, you have to use it correctly.Such model cannot possibly be an exercise in mathematics any more, because the model-theoretic model for a theory in mathematics is NEVER the real world. — alcontali
Say that to an economist.Furthermore, such empirical discipline always requires its own regulatory framework that duly constrains what exactly it is willing to talk about. They do not use just mathematics either. There is always also a completely native bureaucracy of rules. — alcontali
Yes, the observer plays the dominant role.Hence inter-subjectivity? The observer effect seems to play a role here. — Wallows
Or perhaps to speed up, improve our understanding of reality.But, that aside, I can see the point of utilizing some ideas from Godel to justify the need for us, as a species, to slow down, as there doesn't seem to be a light at the end of the tunnel. You can thank Godel for that. — Wallows
perhaps the problem lies is that the correct model would be something that falls into the category of the incompleteness results, in a way is a Gödel number the Gödels incompleteness theorem (is it the first theorem?) talks about. — ssu
But we are not angels, who view the universe from the outside. Instead, we and our models are both part of the universe we are describing. Thus a physical theory is self referencing, like in Godel’s theorem. One might therefore expect it to be either inconsistent or incomplete. The theories we have so far are both inconsistent and incomplete. — Hawking in Gödel and the end of physics
Let f: N→N be the function defined by:
f(#(θ)) = #(θ(°#(θ))) — Wikipedia, start of the proof for Carnap's diagonal lemma
As I earlier said, many don't see the subtle difference between Russell's paradox and Gödels (or Turings) finding. Wittgenstein accused Gödel of finding the paradox again and didn't hit it so well with Turing either. It's basically indirect reference.However, Carnap's diagonal lemma is itself not self-referencing, and Gödel's first incompleteness theorem is neither. The entire self-referencing thing is just a hack to get the proof going. I don't understand Hawking's obsession with the "self-referencing" thing. Alan Turing uses a similar hack to get the proof for the impossibility to solve his Halting Problem going. It is not that the Halting Problem itself would be self-referencing. — alcontali
As I earlier said, many don't see the subtle difference between Russell's paradox and Gödels (or Turings) finding. — ssu
Just as the real number that Cantor shows cannot be in any list. Of course, we do see the relation between the real number and the list of real numbers. Same thing. Not a paradox. — ssu
EXACTLY!!!Diagonalization does not have to be hard (but, of course, sometimes it is ...) — alcontali
Oh boy, here we go again. Might want to reconsider; it's theorems not axioms that could possibly be true, but not provable. :roll: — jgill
Well, I tend to think that axioms can be theoretical in nature? Have you ever encountered such a sentiment in your line of work? — Wallows
There is no repeating pattern, yet we can instantly notice it in it's decimal form 3,14159 26535 89793.... And you have even ways to calculate it.Since it starts on the left side always in the same way, going off into infinity, it might be a pattern, if you believe in such things. — Gregory
Yes, that seems to me to be a fair characterisation of why Godel's incompleteness theorem is no barrier to progress in mathematics in most areas of interest and use. The only maths I know of it having killed was Hilbert's project to try to prove maths to be complete and consistent.Is that a coherent explanation for why we still go on or should we stop at some point and realize some deeper truth? — Wallows
So, yes, agreed, it is quite easy to overstep the boundaries of Gödel's incompleteness theorems by incorrectly applying them where they do not apply. — alcontali
Adding axioms does not necessarily increase the power of a theory, but it pretty much always increases the amount of trust that the theory requires. — alcontali
For example, number theory can "see" all the Gödelian numbers representing the theorems and their proofs in set theory. So, number theory "knows" all theorems in set theory, but there are quite a few of these theorems that it does not trust. — alcontali
Hilbert's program got demolished by Gödel.
— fishfry
Well, no, disagreed. Hilbert merely received a negative answer to one of his many questions ... — alcontali
The only maths I know of it having killed was Hilbert's project to try to prove maths to be complete and consistent. — andrewk
Even though I formally agree with your views on the matter, I still want to point out what Stephen Hawking wrote on the subject:
What is the relation between Godel’s theorem and whether we can formulate the theory of the universe in terms of a finite number of principles? One connection is obvious. According to the positivist philosophy of science, a physical theory is a mathematical model. So if there are mathematical results that can not be proved, there are physical problems that can not be predicted.
— Stephen Hawking, Gödel and the end of physics — alcontali
Aristotle to Aquinas to Scotus thought an eternity in the future to be impossible to complete, — Gregory
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