Yes, it would be good if you could present the Tarski's and Godel's theorems in connection with HOL with your own explanations (the proofs and refutations) in clear English with added formulas too (if needed). — Corvus
Tarski never noticed that "This sentence is not true" is not a truth bearer thus the same ask asking is this sentence true or false — PL Olcott
In PASCAL or C, "What time is it?" can be set as True or False in a variable — Corvus
I am not talking about anything like that. I am referring to the (non-existent truth value of the) actual semantic meaning of the English sentence: What time is it? — PL Olcott
I see. But my point was, isn't the main point of using HOL (as also mentioned in the OP title) is being able to set TF values to the non-existent truth value sentences or word such as "What time is it?", and make use of them in the real world applications? — Corvus
I am waiting for a couple of cheap old Prolog books which are on my way. Prolog seems to be the system for Logic programming. It seems to be a PL which has a long history, but seems to be still very much popular even now especially for AI applications. — Corvus
The ones I ordered are,
PROLOG ++: The Power of Object-oriented and Logic Programming" by C. Moss.
Prolog Programming for Artificial Intelligence by Bratko. — Corvus
Analytic truth can be true, but wrong. Can "wrong" be "true", and "right" be "false"? — Corvus
Saying that analytic truth can be wrong it like saying that kittens can be 15 story office buildings it cannot possibly ever happen. — PL Olcott
Analytic truth can be wrong, when it contradicts the reality. The reality has potential possibility to be otherwise from status quo at any moment of time. Therefore AT has potential possibility of being wrong. — Corvus
As our Friend PL Olcott points out: "mathematics is incomplete." And that presumption profoundly affects the symbolic language (syntax) of logic in the First and Second Orders. Higher-order logic (HOL) is another animal altogether. — Rocco Rosano
I am stipulating that analytic truth are only those expressions of language that are a correct model of the actual world. It seems a little nutty to define it any other way. — PL Olcott
Analytic truth can be wrong — Corvus
That is like saying the integer five may not be any kind of number at all. Everything that is {incorrect} is excluded from the body of {truth}. That people make mistakes has no actual effect what-so-ever on truth itself. If everyone in the universe is certain that X is true and X is not true their incorrect belief does not change this. — PL Olcott
:)Analytic truth can be wrong — Corvus
You are not reading what comes after,
Analytic truth can be wrong — Corvus
I have to call you on this it to make it explicitly clear. Your reference is to a footnote to an illustrative preliminary proof that Godel presents in the beginning of his1931 paper.This eliminates this terrible mistake by Gödel:
"14 Every epistemological antinomy can likewise be used for a similar undecidability proof." (Gödel 1931:43-44) — PL Olcott
He explicitly limits his argument to systems of sufficient expressive power. He further notes that while his sample expression asserts its own unprovability while at the same time neither itself nor its negation are provable, that it must be true because it asserts its own unprovability. "The proposition undecidable in the system PM is thus decidable by metamathematical arguments." — tim wood
I am obliged to conclude that what you're writing about has nothing to do with Godel or any of Godel's ideas. But since you claim Godel has made "a ridiculously stupid mistake," it appears you do not know what Godel's ideas are about. Which is too bad, because all you have to do is just read the first section of his 1931 paper, which you cited, and you would have enough of an understanding of his ideas to know that he at least was not mistaken. And as well you might try reading your other citation. — tim wood
{correct} is an aspect of the meaning of the term {truth} so analytic truth cannot possibly be wrong in any way what-so-ever. If it cannot possibly be wrong in any way what-so-ever then it cannot possibly be wrong in any specific way. — PL Olcott
In other words you too simply don't understand that epistemological antinomies (AKA self-contradictory expressions) are simply not truth bearers thus have no idea why this statement is pure nonsense:
...14 Every epistemological antinomy can likewise be used for a similar undecidability proof...
(Gödel 1931:43-44) — PL Olcott
Your points seem to be confined in the domain of analytic truth only. In a domain where all in the domain is defined as truth regardless of the real world cases — Corvus
I'm guessing in your system Godelian self-reference is simply ruled out, which you certainly can do. But that makes Godel neither wrong nor a fool, and to say he is simply means that one of you is both. — tim wood
I'm guessing in your system Godelian self-reference is simply ruled out, which you certainly can do. But that makes Godel neither wrong nor a fool, and to say he is simply means that one of you is both. — tim wood
The way that all self-contradictory sentences are ruled out is simple. Self-contradictory sentences cannot be proven or refuted from axioms thus are tossed out as non-truth bearers. — PL Olcott
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