An attempt is made to explicate and analyze Kurt Gödel's philosophy of mathematics with emphasis on his defense of classical mathematics, and his rejection of intuitionism, and the vicious circle principle. Gödel's belief in the real existence of mathematical objects is examined. It is argued that one need not accept Gödel's pronounced realism in order to assent to his methodology of mathematics.
(1) No totality can contain members definable only in terms of this totality.
(2) No totality can contain members involving this totality.
(3) No totality can contain members presupposing this totality.
(4) Nothing defined in terms of a propositional function can be a possible argument of this function.
The problem arises, and is most vexing (vicious), when seeking to justify categorical, self-subsuming, statements or ideas (e.g. criterion problem, global skepticism, radical relativism, value/meaning nihilism, etc) as well as apodictic formalisms like mathematics and logic. Gödel monumentally brings this 'vicious circularity' to the fore in the latter case as, I think, Sextus Emipricus had done in the former. Kant's antinomies perhaps are a bridge. Anyway, very interestion OP, javi; I"m looking forward to see what others – our resident 'mathematics & logic nerds' – make of it.Questions of circularity are as old as philosophy., but it was never realized how deeply they could permeate logic and mathematics. — javi2541997
very interestion OP, javi; — 180 Proof
Sextus Emipricus had done in the former. — 180 Proof
The argument seems to be that a system's being true (about bridges) is on a par with its being consistent, in that we can only show either by bringing in something form outside - this being a consequence of the second incompleteness theorem. — Banno
I'd be interested to hear if others think this an accurate account of Gödel's thinking. — Banno
Yes; that's what I said. — Banno
The argument seems to be that a system's being true (about bridges) is on a par with its being consistent, in that we can only show either by bringing in something form outside - this being a consequence of the second incompleteness theorem.
I'd be interested to hear if others think this an accurate account of Gödel's thinking. — Banno
The second is that Wittgenstein's notion in §201 of Philosophical Investigations might be applied here. — Banno
The search for a once-and-for-all solution to the paradoxes led Russell, Poincaré, and others to the observation that each of the paradoxes trades on a vicious circle in defining an entity which ultimately creates the paradox. — Harold Ravitch, Ph.D.
But in fact that's an accurate account of a position Gödel is refuting, not thinking — fishfry
Gödel is primarily concerned with the clarity and force of our conception (ideas) of mathematical objects. One can follow Hume and simply refuse to consider questions involving 'existence' in this context — Professor Carnap and Ravitch
Reading deeply the dissertation ..., — javi2541997
Gödel has defended classical mathematics against each of the major programs of restricted methods. He has rejected intuitionism, semi-intuitionism, the vicious circle principle, and constructive or finitist programs in general. has defended classical mathematics against each of the major programs of restricted methods. He has rejected intuitionism, semi-intuitionism, the vicious circle principle, and constructive or finitist programs in general.
Thanks for linking the article. — fishfry
ps -- I noted that the passage you quoted about vicious circles mentions the problems with Dedekind cuts. I'm not entirely sure of exactly what they mean, — fishfry
he is already dead... after 53 years of his thesis approval. — javi2541997
For this reason, according to Gödel, there are four forms of vicious circle inside mathematics:
That also applies to metaphysics.
(1) No totality can contain members definable only in terms of this totality.
(2) No totality can contain members involving this totality.
(3) No totality can contain members presupposing this totality.
(4) Nothing defined in terms of a propositional function can be a possible argument of this function. — javi2541997
he [Gödel] would "consider this rather as a proof that the vicious circle principle is false than that classical mathematics is false." — javi2541997
As I shared with my professors years ago when I was in college, if all the evidence in the universe turns against creationism, I would be the first to admit it, but I would still be a creationist because that is what the Word of God seems to indicate. — Kurt Patrick Wise
Even for someone like me, with basic training in math and logic, this makes sense. — TheMadFool
circulus in probando - a premise is the conclusion. — TheMadFool
it assumes certain propositions (axioms) to be true and builds an edifice of true (mathematical) propositions on them — TheMadFool
It needs to be borne in mind that mathematics is ultimately a system, game-like in nature, where we have complete freedom to choose our starting premises aka axioms. — TheMadFool
Exactly in this part, I guess Gödel and Ravitch concided. Those axioms or propositions are so related with the "realism" itself. — javi2541997
in whatever manner syntactical rules are formulated, the power and usefulness of the mathematics resulting is proportional to the power of the mathematical intuition necessary for their proof of admissibility. This phenomenon might be called “the non-eliminability of the content of mathematics by the syntactical interpretation.”
SO Gödel is clarifying the syntactic view while rejecting it. — Banno
This is a vast topic. The more I look in to it the more it grows. And it is difficult. — Banno
I'll come out straight up and say that my own prejudice is that maths is made up as we go along, — Banno
In the SEP article I cited above, an account is given of an argument from Gödel against intuitionist and constructivist views, which Gödel grouped as the "syntactic view", such that the truth of mathematical propositions is determined by their relation to each other, by their syntax, and not by their dependence on facts. — Banno
It seems that for Gödel, being consistent and being true are inseparable; that mathematical truth is displayed in mathematic's empirical applicability; and that hence the consistency of mathematics shows that it is empirically applicable and hence incompatible with the syntactic view. — Banno
The argument is unclear — Banno
places Gödel in the position of having to choose between vicious circles and "classical" mathematics. Gödel rejects vicious circles. — Banno
So back to my own musings. I'd be interested to see if paraconsistent mathematics might present a distinction between consistency and truth that would mitigate against Gödel's almost equating the two. This would count against his argument in the SEP article. — Banno
I'd also be interested in work that sets out how mathematical rules might be shown (a philosophically loaded term after Wittgenstein) in empirical situations, rather than expressed in mathematical terms. See The Epistemology of Visual Thinking in Mathematics — Banno
It is not my understanding that constructivists argue that mathematical truth is based on the axioms. Rather, constructivists merely say that in order to exist, a mathematical object must be constructed as from an algorithm or some kind of describable procedure. But I'm not sure whether that goes along with saying that all mathematical truth is derived from axioms. — fishfry
Might be but I'm unclear on that too. Gödel believed in mathematical truth, even though he knew no set of axioms can prove itself consistent (second incompleteness theorem). More murkiness. — fishfry
I intentionally left axioms out of my post. I've always been struck by the fact that what we select as our axioms is more or less conventional; we might have chosen different axioms. So in that way if one supposes that "all mathematical truth is derived from axioms" all one is doing is insisting on coherence and completeness. — Banno
The claim that all mathematical truth is derived from axioms was decisively falsified by Gödel. I'm not sure what you are saying here. — fishfry
Did you use an axiomatic system? — Banno
I studied logic forty years ago. — Banno
Math uses axiomatic systems, period. — fishfry
Hmm. Your puzzlement has me puzzled, — Banno
Or we might treat it as a series of rules for derivation, never complete but always consistent, to which we add new rules of derivation in a similarly asymptote fashion. — Banno
Is there a reason to think that natural deduction is not as powerful as axiomatisation? — Banno
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