Fine Doubter
Fine Doubter
I'll add this question: truth tables can be fun, but are in any case tedious and time consuming. Is there a better, faster way to test arguments? — tim wood
Terrapin Station
alcontali
Is our list of valid argument forms complete? — TheMadFool
aletheist
It depends on what you mean by "argument forms." As just pointed out, what you seem to be seeking is an axiomatization of classical logic, which typically involves a few primitives and an inference rule. The "existential graphs" of Charles Sanders Peirce are an innovative diagrammatic alternative.Is our list of valid argument forms complete? — TheMadFool
alcontali
The "existential graphs" of Charles Sanders Peirce are an innovative diagrammatic alternative. — aletheist
I even think (don't know, could be wrong) that all can be reduced to negation, "~," and or, "v." — tim wood
alcontali
In some systems, not all. Maybe alcontali can tell us which, and why. — tim wood
aletheist
As already noted, it depends on which system of logic you have in mind, since Gödel's incompleteness theorem only applies to formal systems "within which a certain amount of arithmetic can be carried out" (Stanford). For example, there are well-established proofs that the now-standard systems of first-order propositional and predicate logic are both (deductively) complete and consistent.One thing I'd like to know is whether logic - the entire system - is complete or not. I vaguely remember reading somewhere that logic is a complete system. — TheMadFool
For example, there are well-established proofs that the now-standard systems of first-order propositional and predicate logic are both (deductively) complete and consistent. — aletheist
aletheist
I mean exactly what I said, quoting the Stanford article--Gödel's incompleteness theorem only applies to formal systems "within which a certain amount of arithmetic can be carried out" (emphasis mine).You mean it's possible to create an axiomatic system that is complete and consistent as long as it doesn't involve arithmetic? — TheMadFool
Because there are minimum requirements for a formal system to be able to generate the kind of undecidable sentence that Gödel's incompleteness theorem requires. gave an example of a formal system that can do some arithmetic, but not enough for the theorem to apply.Do you know why this is the case? — TheMadFool
Thomas Bailey
Agent Smith
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