6. P is known from 5 and 3 — TheMadFool
We know It is unknown that The USA has 1 president.
Now we know that P is true AND that it was unknown. — TheMadFool
At (6) they get a contradiction and from that we can prove every statement (can't we?)
But they keep proving for 5 more steps for no apparent reason. — Meta
Then, if you know Q: it is known that it is unknown that elephants are mammals. That means we now know that elephants are mammals — TheMadFool
I think your mistake is not forming a proposition.
To better present Fitch's paradox, premise 3 should read "Assume proposition Q: P is an unknown truth" — Michael
There's no need to say ''P is a truth''. That's redundant. — TheMadFool
Amounts to the same thing. Asserting P is the same as asserting P is true.
Then "P is false" would be a contradiction — Michael
KP. For every proposition P, it is possible to know P. — Fafner
The paradox tells us about the problems of using unconstrained second-order languages, rather than telling us anything meaningful about knowledge — andrewk
But there's no such thing as a theory of types, and there could be no "syntax errors" in a language (because every sentence in language can be potentially made sense of with the right interpretation).If one of the standard ways of constraining higher-order logic to retain consistency (eg Russell's theory of Types), is invoked, the paradox disappears because some of the statements in the attempted proof cannot be made - they are syntax errors. — andrewk
Your logic seems to be accepted and understood by a single person in the world therefore it is not a classical one. — Meta
Assume you know Q: It is known that it is unknown that the color of your hair is red.
By knowing Q, you now know the nested truth, which is: the color of your hair is red. — TheMadFool
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