Unless P or ~P has been proved in Russell's system P has no truth value and thus cannot be a proposition according to the law of the excluded middle. Sometimes this "proof" requires an infinite sequence of steps. — PL Olcott
Simplest is this: if P is undecidable, then neither P nor ~P are provable in R. I don't know what R is — tim wood
Simplest is this: if P is undecidable, then neither P nor ~P are provable in R. I don't know what R is, but let's assume it stands for the kinds of systems that are actually relevant to this discussion, and which include arithmetic as described by Godel. As such, for clarity let R = G, and let us refer to P as unprovable in G. — tim wood
For a given language, we have different models. A model is an interpretation of the meaning of the symbols of the language. Per a given model, every sentence receives exactly one of the two truth values. That is, per a given model, no sentence is both true and false, and every sentence is either true or it is false. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I already specified that the R I am referring to is the set of semantic meanings specified as expressions of language. This is the key foundation of my whole point and cannot be ignored. This R is the ultimate foundation of the truth of all expressions of language that are {true on the basis of their meaning}.
Truth preserving operations applied to these expressions that fail to derive P or ~P prove that P is not a proposition because it violates the law of excluded middle. — PL Olcott
And I've granted R all day long. But you're not talking just about R, but generalizing your claims beyond R, and as you persist beyond reason, so with reason I call you out and warn against engaging with you. And not to be forgot, you have been asked about R itself and given no answer. That is, R does not exist and I suspect cannot exist, either way, how is R an "ultimate foundation" of anything? By contrast, Godel et al were exactly rigorously clear about what their system(s) are. — tim wood
On may reasonably propose an alternative formalized logic, but a formalized logic requires that we have a purely mechanical method by which to determine whether a given finite sequence of sentences is or is not a proof, which requires a mechanical method by which to determine whether a given sequence of symbols is or is not a sentence. — TonesInDeepFreeze
The meanings of sentences are given by the method of models — TonesInDeepFreeze
The principle of explosion adheres to the principle of truth preservation. — TonesInDeepFreeze
The principle of truth preservation is: All cases in which the premises are true are cases in which the conclusion is true. Put another way: There are no cases in which the premises are true but the conclusion is false. — TonesInDeepFreeze
the set of expressions of specified semantic meanings
— PL Olcott
Please define this. If it is a constructed set, please show how it is constructed. — tim wood
You ether cannot or will not answer it. You describe what you call a set and make certain claims about it. You have not shown that it exists or can exist, or how it's built, and you certainly have not shown how it can satisfy the claims you make for it.Please define this. If it is a constructed set, please show how it is constructed. — tim wood
* 'entailment' and 'consequence' are usually taken as specifying the same relation. — TonesInDeepFreeze
* If C is any contradiction and P is any sentence, then we have C -> P, but that does not allow inferring P. Rather, we would infer P from (C -> P) & C. But since we never have C, don't have (C -> P) & C so we still don't have P. — TonesInDeepFreeze
* Montague semantics is based on compositionality as with the method of models (though with extended aspects such as types, modality, intensionality and possible world models). — TonesInDeepFreeze
You ether cannot or will not answer it. You describe what you call a set and make certain claims about it. You have not shown that it exists or can exist, or how it's built, and you certainly have not shown how it can satisfy the claims you make for it. — tim wood
Rather than merely bandying Richard Montague, the poster would do well to start at the beginning with symbolic logic as presented in his textbook: — TonesInDeepFreeze
↪PL Olcott Do you understand that in terms of these discussions and your replies to me you're talking crazy - most of your replies being either or both nonsense and non-sequiturs? — tim wood
↪PL Olcott You're incoherent, here. And it looks like you do not understand the distinction between valid and true. — tim wood
* If C is any contradiction and P is any sentence, then we have C -> P, but that does not allow inferring P. Rather, we would infer P from (C -> P) & C. But since we never have C, don't have (C -> P) & C so we still don't have P. — TonesInDeepFreeze
(1) We know that "Not all lemons are yellow", as it has been assumed to be true.
(2) We know that "All lemons are yellow", as it has been assumed to be true.
(3) Therefore, the two-part statement "All lemons are yellow or unicorns exist" must also be true, since the first part of the statement ("All lemons are yellow") has already been assumed, and the use of "or" means that if even one part of the statement is true, the statement as a whole must be true as well. — PL Olcott
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