Whats an example of an atheist trying to impose their views? — DingoJones
…I feel sorry for Atheists. — 3017amen
Still, in an idealized world the "isProvable" predicate can really be implemented — alcontali
Meaning that ideally every true statement has a corresponding proof and every false statement has no corresponding proof (or perhaps a corresponding disproof)? — Andrew M
And is that the diagonal? (i.e., false/not provable, true/provable) — Andrew M
OK, how does this part work? — Andrew M
I think either something about the form of the sentence (e.g., HasAnEvenNumberOfLetters) — Andrew M
IsProvable doesn't seem to meet that criteria since it depends on the meaning of the sentence. — Andrew M
But "the face is green" is not a predicate. It's fine as a sentence however (with a Godel number). — Andrew M
So would this show that some true sentences are not provable, or just that those "true" sentences are problematic in some way, similar to the liar sentence or the above "heavy" sentences? — Andrew M
So would this show that some true sentences are not provable, or just that those "true" sentences are problematic in some way, similar to the liar sentence or the above "heavy" sentences? — Andrew M
Again, maybe my memory is playing tricks on me. So I ask you, instead of accusing you: did you reword the opening post? — god must be atheist
The theist has to decide first how many gods there are, and the set must include one specific number, for instance, 4565 in case of Greco-Roman worship. — god must be atheist
I addressed this already. Assuming {0,1,2,3,4,5} gods, has the counter assumption of not having {0,1,2,3,4,5} gods.
Go from here. — god must be atheist
t is plausible that they have equal probability to be true while they are mutually exclusive
Consistency: If there are more gods, or the possibility of more than one god, then the probabilities get divided into more subsets. That is, (There are no 5 gods), (there are no 5938 gods), their opposite (non-existence of gods) grew to be an equal number of subsets (Five gods don't exist,) (5938 gods don't exist). — god must be atheist
I'm guessing here so consider it carefully...I think zero as a number was born in subtraction problems where the minuend and the subtrahend are equal. — TheMadFool
Please only attend to the OP propositions and their continuations directly. — PoeticUniverse
Actulally, he can.
There are two subsets: "God exists" and "God does not exist". Together they form the superset, "Making statements at god's actual existence". — god must be atheist
Personally I think zero began simply as a symbol for nothing and the rules of mathematical operations were a later development. I have no idea what the actual problems were in which zero was used as a number and not just a symbol for nothing. — TheMadFool
7. If I am too stupid to understand this, please tell me now, outright, so I shall cease and desist, and not bother you with questions. — god must be atheist
You haven't told us how to determine the number of a sentence. And once you give us the rule to determine the number of a sentence (I imagine it's ordinal numbers, not cardinals), then... — god must be atheist
You actually did not describe the lemma ... What is the meaningfulness of talking about two somethings none of us understands, and none of us has any comprehension or concept of? — god must be atheist
So we don't know what the problem is, and we don't know its solution. — god must be atheist
we only know that there is some false proposition that has the same truth value as a predicate function that always returns false, which... duh. — Pfhorrest
I don’t see how any conclusions can be drawn from that to more general statements about predicate functions that sometimes return true or sentences that are true. — Pfhorrest
We could trivially invert the truth values and say that any true sentence has any predicate that always returns true — Pfhorrest
which just says that in a system in which nothing is provable, any true sentence is not provable, which is again trivial. — Pfhorrest
Just curious, is there a constructive argument for the lemma, such that it also holds for intuitionistic logic where proof by contradiction is not allowed? — aletheist
The positions are not necessarily equiprobable. — PoeticUniverse
Well said !
Alas some members rely on pedantry as an excuse for ignorance of the literature. — fresco
You know, using reason to figure out what's true. — Bartricks
My question is how can it be that the Chinese knew about negative numbers, defined as numbers less than zero, and didn't know about zero itself? — TheMadFool
Arguing against logic using logic will inevitably lead to the equivalent of saying "this sentence is a lie." — Artemis
This is true only if we decide to leave out objective reality in our logic. If you base logic on what really is/occurs around you, than it is 'speculative' only to the extent you don't trust your senses and their interpretation. — lepriçok
These are not axioms, rather basic truths of life that everyone agrees with. This solves your problem. Reason and logic must be grounded in this reality to avoid the speculative catastrophe — lepriçok
We have to take it on blind trust. — lepriçok
You're trying to logic your way out of logic. It's not going to work. — Artemis
My thoughts exactly. And I was already thinking about mathematics and abstract concepts. Nobody knows why they are so effective in cosmology and science, yet we just assume...………what? — 3017amen
Indeed! I too, don't understand that rationale. I mean, there is plenty in the world that is unexplainable...including our own conscious existence. — 3017amen
I think that it is a rather strict system, which allows very little for freedom — lepriçok
For instance, what does Islam say about religious freedom, and by its norms, am I allowed to choose my creed, or not to believe in God at all. If Islam doesn't allow this, it has little relevance in libertarianism. — lepriçok
Another problem is that there could be distinguished God as the source of moral law and human reason as the source moral law. The first is very speculative, therefore easily refuted using strict logic and empirical facts, while human reason is the only trustworthy place of insights into the human nature and the needs of society, for it to prosper. — lepriçok
We have written laws — lepriçok
Everyone, guided by the main libertarian framework, can document their moral principles themselves. — lepriçok
We have totalitarianism, communism, fascism, statism, eugenics, social Darwinism, elitism that have all sorts of ethics rules that serve only the needs of narrow groups and do nothing good to humanity. — lepriçok
For instance, would you acknowledge that there are prescriptions of reason? Would you acknowledge that this argument form is valid:
1. P
2. Q
3. Therefore P and Q
And that the validity of this argument consists of no more or less than a prescription of reason to believe 3 if 1 and 2 are true? — Bartricks
I think you might be in Thailand. — Wayfarer
apanese Pure Land services are very like church services, complete with hymns, which imitate the Christian style, and sermons ('dharma talks') along with sutra recitation (which is regulated to the minutest details in intonation and pronunciation.) — Wayfarer
Elders > monks > laymen & laywomen? — praxis
With the Buddha being the ultimate authority, of course. — praxis
God does not exist. Religion is nonsense. We all know it. Get over it. — Swan
It is akin to saying that those who do not believe in the tooth fairy have the aim of disproving the existence of a tooth fairy... rejection of a belief does not infer or confer the responsibility, goal or even desire to disprove said belief. — Soap Needswater
Even among scholars of philosophy and religion there is no consensus as far as Buddhism's position is concerned. — Daniel C
Of course, Buddhism doesn’t speak of a divinity in the strict sense, but it deals with some sort of universal power and that amounts to the same. — Congau
Religion, and this absolutely includes Buddhism, has a hierarchical authority structure and is primarily concerned with meaning and social cohesion. — praxis
There's no necessity to fall back on anything, because libertarians use common sense morality, not based on any metaphysical doctrine. — lepriçok
Can God be immoral, if he does, why doesn't he choose to be immoral. — lepriçok
I think that libertarian ethics are optimal for modern times, because other systems just add other unnecessary objects of transgression and forbidden types of action that are too restrictive to have a comfortable, yet pacifist life. — lepriçok
How this distinction is related to the question of religion, and is it necessary for libertarians to be atheists. — lepriçok
Are we slaves to God as well? — lepriçok
Is it good or we should rebel? — lepriçok
This tension between what the individual wants, and what they must do for something like a workplace is taken as a given of living in a society. — schopenhauer1
Seems to be way off topic. Can you lead us back? — Banno
And, to be sure, the sentences in English are different animals from their counterparts in math-logic. The math-logic being rigorous, the English not. — tim wood
This a description of how power plays out, right? — frank