Where does one find a definition of 'actual' that includes 'completed'? — TonesInDeepFreeze
It might go the same way it came (per Mary Tiles). — frank
do you agree that it is necessary that there is a thing counted — Metaphysician Undercover
If "1" does not refer to the book, as well as what you call the number, then there is nothing being counted — Metaphysician Undercover
we cannot dispense with the fact that "1" must refer to the object being counted, a book — Metaphysician Undercover
To have a true count, "1" must refer to the first book, "2" refers to the first and second together — Metaphysician Undercover
I do not know the technical terms (syntax?, proof system?). — Trestone
For me a contradiction is, if the same statement is shown as true and not true. — Trestone
indirect or by contradiction — Trestone
That is, layer logic disproves all formulas of the form 'P & ~P' [?'] — TonesInDeepFreeze
No, only when there are different layers used. — Trestone
~0=1 Trestone: false in layer math — TonesInDeepFreeze
~Ex (x is a natural number & x>x) Trestone: false in layer math — TonesInDeepFreeze
In many cases it helps, that in layder 0 all sentences have truth value "undefined". — Trestone
Non-Turing algorithms — Trestone
You begin with:
(t marks the layers, W(x,t) ist the truth value of x in layer t, -w stands for „not true“ or „false“
ther value „undefined“ I left out to make things easier).
Be M a set and P(M) its power set and F: M -> P(M) a bijection between them (in layer d)
Then the set A is defined with W(x e A, t+1) = w := if ( W(x e M,t)=w and W(x e F(x),t)=-w ) — TonesInDeepFreeze
like in the proof of Cantor, I asume herre that such a F exists. — Trestone
x is a member of a layer set and therefore itself a layer set. — Trestone
the proof about the power set can be similary be "unproofed" — TonesInDeepFreeze
"You will know them by their fruits" (Matthew 7:15-20) — Trestone
I am sorry that I can not answer most your questions to formal details. — Trestone
F: M -> P(M) a bijection between them — Trestone
in layer math, the existence of F does not lead to a contradiction — Trestone
hope you have a little understanding for a "Columbus" — Trestone
Let's say that "1" refers to the number 1, which represents the count, and is also the thing counted — Metaphysician Undercover
Show: There is no function from a set onto its power set.
Proof :
Let f be function from S to PS. Let d = {x | xeS & ~xef(x)}.
dePS.
If d is in range(f), then for some x in S we have d=f(x).
If xef(x), then ~xed, so ~xef(x).
If ~xef(x), then xed, so xef(x).
Contradiction. So d is not in the range of f. So f is not a function from S onto PS.
/
Show: ~ExAy yex.
Let Ay yex.
Let d = {x | xey & ~xex}.
If ded, then ~ded.
If ~ded, then ded.
Contradiction. So ~ExAy yex. — TonesInDeepFreeze
In ordinary mathematical logic, contradictions are syntactical, not requiring assignment of truth values. Meanwhile, as far as I can tell, your layer logic is described primarily semantically in terms of truth values; I don't know the syntax of whatever proof system you have in mind, so I can't evaluate the means by which you would prevent (syntactical) contradictions. You could assert that provability entails soundness, but we need to prove that, not just assert it, and you can't prove it without first stating what the proof system is. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I would guess that layer logic does disprove contradictions. That is, layer logic disproves all formulas of the form 'P & ~P' (where they "reside" (or\e whatever way you say it) in the same level [should be layer]). — TonesInDeepFreeze
what you say is that there are three truth values and that statements are evaluated at different levels [should be layers]. You haven't given even the starting point: description of evaluation of truth and falsehood for atomic sentences, compound sentences, and quantificational sentences. — TonesInDeepFreeze
how I handle the proof of the halting problem — Trestone
with layer logic we have to add layers if a program has to give a value/result:
A given program halts or not in layer k for given input data. — Trestone
my earlier handling of Cantor´s diagonalization and proof in layer logic — Trestone
(t marks the layers, W(x,t) ist the truth value of x in layer t, -w stands for „not true“ or „false“
ther value „undefined“ I left out to make things easier).
Be M a set and P(M) its power set and F: M -> P(M) a bijection between them (in layer d)
Then the set A is defined with W(x e A, t+1) = w := if ( W(x e M,t)=w and W(x e F(x),t)=-w ) — Trestone
F: M -> P(M) a bijection — Trestone
the proof about the power set can be similary be "unproofed" like the halting problem — Trestone
His new world is pure nonsense and fantasy for the Cave people. — Trestone
all the proofs you named are valid no more — Trestone
by constructing the contradictions we have to use different layers,
and different truth values in different layer are not a contradiction in layer logic. — Trestone
There is a fundamental problem with the concept of numbers. The numeral "1" represents a basic unity. an individual. The "2" represents two of those individuals together, and "3" represents three, etc. But then we want "2" and "3", each to represent a distinct unity as well. So we have to allow that "1" represents a different type of unity than "2" does, or else we'd have the contradiction of "2" representing both one and also two of the same type of unity. — Metaphysician Undercover
near complete denial of the relation between one and unity — Metaphysician Undercover
Then I conclude that what needs to be discussed is clarification of P and Q. — Metaphysician Undercover
Count the books on the shelf for example. "Book" signifies the type of unity being counted, "1" signifies that a unity called "a book" has been identified, and a first one has been counted , "2" signifies two of these units, etc.. — Metaphysician Undercover
I assume you know how to use Google or some other search facility. You could simply search this if you need such a confirmation, instead of asking me to do your research for you. — Metaphysician Undercover
Here's the first entry I get when I Google that question, is 1 a prime number — Metaphysician Undercover
Of course the notion of 'one' is related to that of a unity. But even aside from parsing, I don't know who in particular you think holds that "The "2" represents two of those individuals together, and "3" represents three, etc". It would help if you would cite at least one particular written passage by someone that you think is properly rendered as "the numeral "1" represents a basic unity. an individual. The "2" represents two of those individuals together, and "3" represents three, etc" and "'2" and "3" represent some kind of unity". — TonesInDeepFreeze
Analysis of most classical indirect proofs show — Trestone
Thus one can never say "I always lie" — maytham naei
> "I mostly lie"
Hopefully you don't know people in your life who mostly lie. But it's still possible for someone to do so. — maytham naei
Hopefully you don't know people in your life who mostly lie. — maytham naei
More basically, I don't know why one would fret over any of this, since I don't know anyone who claims "the numeral "1" represents a basic unity. an individual.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
I find that very strange I hear them used that way all the time. — Metaphysician Undercover
"the numeral "1" represents a basic unity. an individual. The "2" represents two of those individuals together, and "3" represents three, etc" — TonesInDeepFreeze
You haven't really ever thought about such fundamental issues as how we use numerals, and you don't really understand why anyone else would. — Metaphysician Undercover
I see no problem with that in itself. The problem is when we want to say that, and also that "2" and "3" represent a type of unity. — Metaphysician Undercover
I am claiming that there is a fundamental problem with numbers. If "1", "2", "3", etc. , are used to represent unities, — Metaphysician Undercover
There is a fundamental problem with the concept of numbers. The numeral "1" represents a basic unity. an individual. The "2" represents two of those individuals together, and "3" represents three, etc. But then we want "2" and "3", each to represent a distinct unity as well. So we have to allow that "1" represents a different type of unity than "2" does, or else we'd have the contradiction of "2" representing both one and also two of the same type of unity. — Metaphysician Undercover
Where can I actualy read anyone explaining the concept of numbers that way?
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Didn't you just read it? — Metaphysician Undercover
There is a fundamental problem with the concept of numbers. The numeral "1" represents a basic unity. an individual. The "2" represents two of those individuals together, and "3" represents three, etc. But then we want "2" and "3", each to represent a distinct unity as well. — Metaphysician Undercover
as we go towards 0 and infinity, are we just supposed to say, "Oh well?" Apparently. — synthesis
maths is essentially an axiomatic system, anything goes so long as you don't contradict yourself within one. — TheMadFool
The diagonalization of Cantor leads to the way out:
Of course the proof is correct, but it uses the classical logic. — Trestone
I can't help it if your terminology is a little off the beaten path. You kept referring to a "method of models", and I couldn't even find that on google. — Metaphysician Undercover
[emphases added]You need to read a book or other systematic presentation of mathematical logic in which the method of models is explained step by step — TonesInDeepFreeze
I tend to think it is something you made up as a ruse — Metaphysician Undercover
that's not who the article is aimed at — fishfry
"The whole of math" includes the ultimate truth or falsity of any given proposition, irrespective of its provability in any given axiomatic system. — fishfry
My opinion is supported by the fact that Kurt Gödel was a Platonist, and believed that there was a true fact of the matter for every mathematical proposition. — fishfry
what Boolos wrote was wrong. — fishfry
Cantor's proof that there are more reals than natural numbers. The issue here is that the reductio ad absurdum proof [...] — ssu
my complaint is that [Boolos] did not distinguish between "PA can prove ..." and "It can be proved ..." — fishfry
(1) So in the empirical context, your objection was refuted.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
This is incorrect, because there is no empirical object referred to by "2+1", or "3". — Metaphysician Undercover
Now I'm waiting for proof that "2+1" refers to the same object as "3". — Metaphysician Undercover
. I do, nonetheless, intend to learn the language of formal logic — Aryamoy Mitra
Godel's second incompleteness theorem explained in words of one syllable — bongo fury
