One choice leads to understanding. The other, to psychoceramics. — Banno
No. Not any. But a lot of them. Your questions and observations do credit to an intelligent 15-year-old, but that's not you, is it. The answers are in the material you already have. You just have to work it though, and Godel is twisty-tricky, but beyond that not so difficult, except in some of the more arcane details, which to the substance are not essential.Godel claims any given axiomatic mathematical system is incomplete because there's always going to be a mathematical proposition that's both — TheMadFool
Godel sentences, if you don't know what they are, are sentences like "this mathematical statement is true but unprovable in a given axiomatic system... As you can see, Godel sentences are neither axioms nor theorems which leads me to believe they aren't mathematical truths at all unless..." — TheMadFool
The answer was given back here: ↪boethius
You missed it or misunderstood it.
SO, again, what will you conclude? — Banno
Indeed, either Godel is wrong, along with all the subsequent mathematicians and logicians who have agreed with his findings and built on them. Or you have made an error.
And again, what will you conclude? — Banno
There can be true statements that have no proof. Incompleteness shows us an example.
There can also be just "true facts" about numbers and arithmetic that are true and there's simply no proof possible.
For instance, the Collatz conjecture we may simply never be able to prove is true, false, or even undecidable, it just stays unknown (beyond what we can check through computer calculation, which wikipedia says we've done to 87 * 2^60 which seems impressible is minuscule compared to "all numbers"). I.e. it can be "true" but also true that no proof nor proving it's undecidable is possible; some things that "resist refutation" can potentially just stay a big question mark indefinitely. The halting problem is a related concept. — boethius
Sure.
I've argued as much elsewhere. Being true is not the same as being proven, justified, or believed — Banno
Let me ask you another question... can "This statement is not proven" be false?
Start by assuming that it has been proven...
Then consider what happens when it is assume to be false. — Banno
Sure. — Banno
Godel's theorems are missing the proof that is both necessary and sufficient to prove Godel sentences. — TheMadFool
Yes, "this statement is not proven" can be false. — TheMadFool
So, you are right, and mathematics is wrong.
Then your name is most apt. — Banno
Hence, being proven and being true are not the very same. — Banno
Yes, "this statement is not proven" can be false. Ok, I assumed that it has been proven. Now I consider what happens if it is assumed to be false. We'll arrive at a contradiction. So? — TheMadFool
...then there is a proof, and it is true.
The only option is to conclude that it is true and hence not proven.
Hence, being proven and being true are not the very same. — Banno
OK, let's try something a little bit more complex.
"this statement is not proven" is a well-formed formula in the system that Godel constructed.
It cannot be proven within that system
But if you peruse it again, you will see that it cannot be false.
Here's the proof, informally: If it is false, then there is a proof and it must be true, which would be a contradiction. IF it is true, there is no contradiction Hence, it is true.
Now that proof lies outside of the system constructed by Godel. — Banno
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