I get it that the set of all sets that are not members of themselves yields a paradox resolved by ruling that such a "set" is not a set under the rules. — tim wood
metaphorical — tim wood
A good mirror for us all — tim wood
how it could be that we can “compute that it does hold” and yet not have, at some level or another, thereby “proven” it. — Pfhorrest
Take a set {P}. If it's impossible to make this set a member of another set — TheMadFool
By definition, the set of all sets encompasses all sets. — Philosopher19
this means that we agree to disagree on this. — Philosopher19
(1) Set theory is incomplete, therefore set theory is consistent.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
If that's what you want to believe, then believe. — Philosopher19
Rejection of the set of all sets is blatantly contradictory. — Philosopher19
You are like child in your reasoning and manner of discussion. — Philosopher19
I shouldn't have to spoon feed you — Philosopher19
am I to think that putting, say, a list of items e.g. 1, w, # inside curly braces like so, {1, w, #} amounts to doing nothing? — TheMadFool
You cannot have a set of all sets that are members of themselves: How are you going to logically write this? — Philosopher19
1. If C doesn't contain itself then C contains itself
2. If C contains itself then C doesn't contain itself
where C = the set of all sets that don't contain themselves.
If sets can't contain themselves, the consequent in 1 above and the antecedent in 2 above become meaningless for sets can't contain themselves. At least that's what I think. — TheMadFool
ZF implies incompleteness in proof, theory or system. — Philosopher19
the post that followed it suggests that you are upset, angry, or frustrated — Philosopher19
not a good state to be in when discussing matters of logic or pure reason. — Philosopher19
I think we should just agree to disagree. — Philosopher19
I might be able to offer an opinion as to whether Godel has proved that there are true propositions within mathematics that cannot be mathematically proven. — Janus
Is there any proof that such a "formal system that incorporates methods going beyond ZFC." will or even could be found? — Janus
what you [Pfhorrest] said about there always being a meta-level wherein the unprovable truths within a system can be proven seems questionable. — Janus
Would this fact render all such proofs non-exhaustive and/ or trivial — Janus
that lower-level system has no idea whether or not it's true (because it's unprovable) — Pfhorrest
It's always bothered me that there is no containing set as required by specification. — fishfry
What you and mainstream set theorists seem to think is that this logically entails that the set of all sets is contradictory — Philosopher19
I have provided proof of this — Philosopher19
You seem to have not understood why I have said "member of itself twice" — Philosopher19
You've rightly recognised that a set of all sets that are not members of themselves that is itself not a member of itself is contradictory. — Philosopher19
There is nothing contradictory about the set of all sets. — Philosopher19
ZF is either inconsistent, or not comprehensive enough (which ultimately means it is inconsistent). — Philosopher19
This fierce dogma needs to die. — Philosopher19
It fallacious to argue that, because N is written as '{x N}' in '{x {x N}}' but as 'N' in '{x N}', we have that {x N} is not in {x N}. It is fallacious to argue from the mere happenstance of two different means of notating the set.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Ok. I've run out of options. Let's get straight to the brass tacks. — TheMadFool
we cannot know for sure that any given proposition is true-but-unprovable, because to be sure of the first part we would have to violate that second part. — Pfhorrest
It might in some principled way remain the case that something or another could be true but not provable, but we could never say for sure that we had an example of that — Pfhorrest
an actual order — Metaphysician Undercover
"Order" is defined as "the condition in which every part, unit, etc., is in its right place". — Metaphysician Undercover
x is either no elements or x is some elements — TheMadFool
{x, {x, N}} - {x, N} = {{x, N} — TheMadFool
I've understood your points — Philosopher19
x is a member of itself twice — Philosopher19
or x is a member of itself, with y and z not being members of themselves — Philosopher19
It does not have such a subset as evidenced by such a subset being clearly contradictory. — Philosopher19
How do you possibly allow yourself to reject the set of all sets? — Philosopher19
a contradiction is clear in the following:
1) A set that contains all sets that are not members of themselves that is itself not a member of itself.
2) No set can logically encompass all sets. — Philosopher19
I don't think you read my post with enough attention to detail — Philosopher19
your belief system is contradictory precisely because it sees 2 as being rational/consistent, whereas 2 is clearly contradictory. — Philosopher19
I definitely believe in a set being a member of itself. I think it is a logical necessity. — Philosopher19
x (x, y, z).
Do you mean x = {x y z}?
— Philosopher19
Here, when we say x is a set of three sets that are members of themselves, we get a contradiction (it amounts to saying one set can be a member of itself twice — Philosopher19
nobody seemed to have recognised the impossibility of a set of all sets that are members of themselves. — Philosopher19
If L is true then L is false = L is false or L is false = L is false — TheMadFool
That went over my head. — TheMadFool
there has to be a set N ="{...} such that it contains itself — TheMadFool
where x = no, one, or more members of that set. — TheMadFool
3. N is a proper subset of {x, N} — TheMadFool
consistency proofs for ZF with the negation of the axiom of foundation/regularity. — fishfry
You mentioned that without the axiom of regularity, we can't prove ~Ex xex. As far as I can tell that means,
Can prove ~Ex xex -> Axiom of regularity. — TheMadFool
Since I've proved a set can't contain itself, it follows that I've assumed the axiom of regularity then. — TheMadFool
Can you prove that a set contain itself? Feel free to use any axiom of your choice. — TheMadFool
Then, there can't be a set that contains itself — TheMadFool
"Order" is defined as "the condition in which every part, unit, etc., is in its right place" — Metaphysician Undercover
It's a spatial order, each dot has its own specific position on the plane. — Metaphysician Undercover
examples — fishfry
Gödel used a modified version of the liar paradox, replacing "this sentence is false" with "this sentence is not provable" — Wikipedia
