Sometimes I use the (fuzzy) term "common logic" — Alkis Piskas
it makes no sense to say that a proposition no one knows about is true — Olivier5
What if the Riemann hypothesis is false? Then we do not reject 1. It is not enough that we don't know whether p is true; it must also be true. "p" means/entails "p is true". This is where the equivocation lies. — Luke
¬Kp could mean that we don't know the content/meaning of p and/or that we don't know the truth of p; that we don't know the Riemann hypothesis and/or that we don't know that it is true. — Luke
It's saying that there is some proposition that is not known to be true. — Michael
So either every true proposition is known to be true (abandon non-omniscience) or for some true propositions it is not possible to know that they are true (abandon knowability principle). — Michael
And yet we don't know which of "the Riemann hypothesis is correct" and "the Riemann hypothesis is not correct" is true, but one of them must be. Therefore not all truths are known. — Michael
Which is a false interpretation. I've explained the logic several times. — Michael
Is "either the Riemann hypothesis is correct or the Riemann hypothesis is not correct" a known truth or an unknown truth? — Luke
You've said that that's a known truth, but you've also used this to argue that not all truths are known. — Luke
On the other hand, it is unknown which one is true — Luke
This has no bearing on Fitch's paradox. — Michael
Yes, either "the Riemann hypothesis is correct" is an unknown truth or "the Riemann hypothesis is not correct" is an unknown truth. — Michael
You disagreed with my claim that the argument implies only that known truths are known. — Luke
However, in order to show otherwise, you would need to demonstrate that some unknown truth can be known. — Luke
However, in order to show otherwise, you would need to demonstrate that some unknown truth can be known.
— Luke
No, I need to show that there are no unknown truths, which is what Fitch's paradox does; see above. — Michael
Also, if there are no unknown truths, then only known truths are known. — Luke
However, it's a fact that some truths aren't know. Either "the Riemann hypothesis is correct" or "the Riemann hypothesis is not correct" is one such truth that isn't know. — Michael
Therefore, the knowability principle fails. — Michael
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