This is helpful. But you have omitted a critical qualification: "[C]annot be proven or refuted" from the axioms of the system. But that the sentence in question is absolutely a truth bearer is established by meta-system argument. — tim wood
"This sentence is not provable." — tim wood
But nowhere in that is Godel demonstrated wrong or foolish — tim wood
↪PL Olcott I’m puzzled as to why you are posting on this amateur forum. Your ideas are groundbreaking and revolutionary. I urge you to submit your thesis to The American Philosophical Quarterly (or equivalent). If there is any validity to your ideas then of course they will print them and the name PL Olcott will be entered into the pantheon of famous philosophers along side with Aristotle, Kant, etc. Go for it PL! — EricH
That is not true at all. If someone says that a {dog} <is> a fifteen story office building this is ruled as false because there are no {dogs} that <are> fifteen story office buildings in the actual world. — PL Olcott
Likewise we can generalize cows eat house bricks into cows eat something.
Any nonsense sentence can be changed into a different sentence that is not nonsense. — PL Olcott
I have the classic Clocksin and Mellish. https://www.amazon.com/Programming-Prolog-Using-ISO-Standard/dp/3540006788 — PL Olcott
It sounds a weak argument for your point. Some surly confused guy calling an honest man dishonest doesn't make the honest man dishonest. Likewise some obtuse man making totally irrelevant claims wouldn't have anything to do with the fact that analytic truth is true or false. — Corvus
You know the cows eat house bricks is false from common sense.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_sense
You don't need to generalise it to find out it is false. But generalisation and abstraction is what FOL and HOL are for the computability of ordinary language. — Corvus
I got this book as well. It just arrived. It seems Prolog is a great logic program language which is built on FOL and HOL. An ideal PL for AI applications. — Corvus
Which is exactly not the basis for mathematics. You might care to pause and consider just exactly what a fact is (and isn't). Agreed, if you compile a great list of facts, then you can distinguish between what is included in your list and what is not included, and presumably can test what is not included to see if it should be added or not. But it is a mistake to conclude that what is not a fact must be nonsense or a piece of stupidity; and that mistake arises out of either not understanding what a fact is and is not, or having a term-of-art definition of "fact" which you then misapply.That set of facts that comprise the actual model of the real world is the basis. — PL Olcott
The distinction here is between what is a fact and what is true. Notwithstanding that the terms are often not distinguished and used interchangeably, they are not the same thing, and you are stumbling badly over that. — tim wood
Which is to say you simply do not know the difference between the two. Try this, 2+2=4. Repesenting a fact or a truth?(1) Some expressions of language are stipulated to be true thus providing semantic meaning to otherwise totally meaningless finite strings. These expressions are the set of facts. — PL Olcott
Which is to say you simply do not know the difference between the two. Try this, 2+2=4. Repesenting a fact or a truth? — tim wood
All facts are propositions that are historical in nature. A kind of hearsay, if you will. And this includes just about everything that can be said about the world — tim wood
My point being that there is a whole barge-load of assumptions you're making, apparently without being aware you're making them. The Boston Red Sox won the 2003 World Series: if three out of three agree with that, does that make it a fact? — tim wood
Here you seem to be saying that we can determine the set of facts from a well constructed dictionary.This is ALL there is to expressions of language that are true on the basis of their meaning
(1) Some expressions of language are stipulated to be true thus providing semantic meaning to otherwise totally meaningless finite strings. These expressions are the set of facts. — PL Olcott
And here you seem to be re-stating the Correspondence Theory of Truth.Actual facts are expressions of language that correctly model the actual world even if everyone in the universe disagrees or no one in the universe knows them. — PL Olcott
Here you seem to be saying that we can determine the set of facts from a well constructed dictionary. — EricH
Facts are true
— PL Olcott
*sigh* Anyone else want to take this on? — tim wood
You're not correcting anything. But you are making a mistake plain and simple. Let's try a test. I'm a Holocaust denier (not, actually). How does your program handle that? — tim wood
The good people telling the truth don't have the slightest clue of how to effectively deal with this.
— PL Olcott
The Germans do, apparently. — tim wood
That set of facts that comprise the actual model of the real world is the basis.
This includes common sense and also details that almost everyone does not know. — PL Olcott
The key most important thing about Prolog is that Gödel's incompleteness can not be implemented in Prolog. — PL Olcott
But your example "cows don't eat house bricks" is neither a fact nor common sense. It is just an irrelevant daft statement, which is based on senseless reasoning. — Corvus
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