I was only offering a possible distinction between statements and propositions. — Cartesian trigger-puppets
I should have explained explicitly what I meant when I wrote "(Cantor)" as you interpreted my intention backwards. — keystone
IF there is any merit to my view, then the hard work hasn't even begun. — keystone
I feel like you could give me a little more slack here on my phrasing. — keystone
Keep in mind that no contradiction has been found in ZFC.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Most notably Hilbert's paradox of the Grand Hotel, but also the following:
Gabriel's horn
Galileo's paradox
Ross–Littlewood paradox
Thomson's lamp
Zeno's paradoxes
Cantor's paradox
Dartboard paradox — keystone
Is it possible for a continuum to exist and be defined mathematically without relying on numbers? — keystone
I'm referring to a curve (1D continuum), surface (2D continuum), etc. — keystone
The hotel simply has actually infinite rooms. Do you think it's a gross misrepresentation of infinite sets? — keystone
Grice defended material implication as a faithful representation of conditional reasoning in natural languages — Srap Tasmaner
Material implication in classical and intuitionistic logic is a static relationship that holds between sets , as in "Smoking events might cause Cancer events", where the condition always exists ,even after the consequent is arrived at, due to the fact it is talking about timeless sets rather than time contingent states of processes. — sime
A statement being an utterance which expresses a complete idea (not necessarily declarative, possibly interrogative, imperative, etc). — Cartesian trigger-puppets
Tarski's T-sentence is the Metalanguage — RussellA
The LHS is the Object Language (OL). — RussellA
In the OL, we can say that the domain — RussellA
The OL is interpreted in the ML. — RussellA
The domain of the OL on the LHS of the biconditional is "cooking", "cleaning", "bar", "fog", etc — RussellA
The domain of the ML on the RHS of the biconditional is cooking, cleaning, bar, fog, etc — RussellA
the T-sentence relates the domain of the OL with the domain of the ML — RussellA
1) In the world is the achromatic object color of greatest lightness characteristically perceived to belong to objects that reflect diffusely nearly all incident energy throughout the visible spectrum. Designate this "white"
2) In the world is precipitation in the form of small white ice crystals formed directly from the water vapor of the air at a temperature of less than 32°F (0°C). Designate this as "snow" — RussellA
3) "Snow is white" is true IFF what has been designated "snow" has what has been designated "white" — RussellA
I observe the world and see something cold, white and frozen and a relation between them, the relation snow. — RussellA
The T-sentence is a biconditional, meaning that the truth of the proposition "snow is white" is conditional on something. — RussellA
"snow" being "white" — RussellA
I'm not employing a utilitarian framework here — Kuro
Isn't this why you keep admonishing AS to get some learnin' on the subject? — Real Gone Cat
is infinity necessary? — Agent Smith
We really don't use 3.14159... (the real value of π). Put yourself in an engineer's shoes and answer that question? — Agent Smith
Is ∞ like God as Cantor believed? — Agent Smith
it's a simple rule of thumb that if a mathematician wants to propose a new idea, s/he'll use ∞ only if absolutely necessary and that too with much reservation. — Agent Smith
Quine's Methods of Logic — Srap Tasmaner
You can stipulate that your account applies to one way of using a word or a phrase, though there may be others — Srap Tasmaner
Consistency follows from soundness. Proving soundness is not deep. We ordinarily just do induction on the length of derivations.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Some simplified detail might be fun. — Banno
how can a finite brain grasp infinity — Agent Smith
You think Agent Smith is pretending to be a finitist when he is really an ultrafinitist at heart? — apokrisis
I think someone is trolling. — Real Gone Cat
Your notion of “mentioning” is as disingenuous — apokrisis
your definition of “being constructive” — apokrisis
There was no argument made by you — Metaphysician Undercover
The traditional early chapters of a logic textbook try to show how the logical constants capture some of what we mean by familiar idioms. (The exception might be Kalish and Montague, because they're not kidding.) — Srap Tasmaner
Your quibbles are doubtless correct. But not helpful. — Banno
If you were not calling me back to defend my statement, then what were you doing [...] — Metaphysician Undercover
So you made a pointless point — apokrisis
as if you were adding some significant and necessary correction to the discussion. — apokrisis
you troll — apokrisis
you have to make it seem untrue — apokrisis
You never even considered what I actually wrote. — Metaphysician Undercover
i never said you "asked", or "suggested" that I reply — Metaphysician Undercover
you called me back to defend what I wrote — Metaphysician Undercover
for the love of all who participate in this forum, shut the fuck up! — Metaphysician Undercover
How is the statement that Wildberger may be a finitist rendered untrue by him being also some subset of that set? — apokrisis
I’m sure that is a basic error that needs pointing out to stop the internet descending into crackpottery and ignorance. — apokrisis
What was the salient point in the discussion that demanded a need for the further distinction? — apokrisis
only referring to it as confused, ignorant, dishonest, rambling, obfuscations. — Metaphysician Undercover
After two months, you called me back to defend what I wrote. — Metaphysician Undercover
ultrafinitist
— TonesInDeepFreeze
What's that? — Agent Smith
If memory serves, [Widlerberger is] a finitist. — Agent Smith
