...to prove there is no proof G in F requires a sequence of
inference steps that prove that they themselves do not exist. — PL Olcott
When Carol says "no" indicating that "no" is an incorrect answer
this makes "no" the correct answer thus not incorrect thus Carol is wrong. — PL Olcott
she could be indicating there IS NO sense of correctness in this “question”, and thus how CAN she “answer” at all—the “correct” “answer” is to throw up her hands and say “no”, as if to say: “What?”. Another way to interpret this is that, of course, Carol CAN answer ‘no’, she can say whatever she wants, defying your idea of correctness with her own truth to herself, in protest. — Antony Nickles
G is not a deduction in F. That would be silly.
Rather, Gödel shows using arithmatization and the diagonalization that the structure of F is such that there must be WFF such as G. He's not using the deductive power of F to prove that G is unprovable. — Banno
Carol does not need to be “indicating… an incorrect answer”, she could be indicating there IS NO sense of correctness in this “question” — Antony Nickles
Exactly. That's what I attempted to explain to PL Olcott, but it is impossible to agree with him, because according to his point, there will always be an incorrect answer because the question is 'posed' to Carol. It seems that poor Carol is guilty of everything regarding this tricky dilemma! — javi2541997
As long as you acknowledge that, again, the “solution set” is YOUR requirement, not revealing anything but the answer you dictate. What you have imposed as “correct” suppresses any other interpretation and thus only has one set of answers. — Antony Nickles
Well, no. He carefully shows why G is unprovable. — Banno
An odd view.it abstracts away WHY. — PL Olcott
You would presumably, for consistency's sake, say the same for Turing Machines, — Banno
Do you also reject the uncountability of the reals? — Banno
↪PL Olcott You seem to me to be doing no more than recursive assertion. It is because it is because it is because... — Banno
PL Olcott That post doesn't tell me anything. — Banno
The reason that the halting problem persists is that the number of possible Turing machines is not enumerable; but any Turing machine designed to check for a halt can only check at most an enumerable number of Turing machines. It therefore cannot check if every Turing machine will halt. — Banno
There are issues here as well, since a question is not the sort of thing that is apt to contradiction. A pair of statements can contradict; some statements can contradict themselves; but questions that are infelicitous are "inappropriate" or "ill-founded" or some such rather than contradictory....a self-contradictory thus incorrect question... — PL Olcott
Well?So again, for consistency, mustn't you also reject Cantor's Diagonal argument as well? — Banno
↪PL Olcott Well, we've dealt with that already, and as ↪Antony Nickles showed, it's problematic for you to insist on a yes or no answer. — Banno
The question is: >>>Is this sentence true: "This sentence is not true."<<<Also, "This sentence is not true" is not a question. — Banno
And further the liar does not play a role in the issue at hand, Gödel incompleteness and Halting. — Banno
↪PL Olcott I don't see this conversation progressing. — Banno
...as ↪Antony Nickles showed, it's problematic for you to insist on a yes or no answer. But there are various ways of dealing with the liar. You earlier went with claiming that it was not a proposition, not eligible for a truth value, Another approach might be to drop bivalence, after Kripke. OR one could go with the revision theory of truth. — Banno
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