First I reject all knowledge which may be expressed in the statement A = All propositions are false. If A is true the A is false because A is itself a proposition. Ergo, A is false which then implies B = Some propositions are true. It is absolutely certain that B is true. — TheMadFool
Gödel-Henkin model existence theorem.
We say that a theory T is syntactically consistent if there is no sentence s such that both s and its negation ¬s are provable from T in our deductive system. The model existence theorem says that for any first-order theory T with a well-orderable language, if T is syntactically consistent, then T has a model. — Wikipedia on Gödel's completeness theorem
B = Some propositions are true. It is absolutely certain that B is true. — TheMadFool
What does 'true' mean in this context? — A Seagull
The result is that everything must be taken as possibly true until we can show that it is false. — Pfhorrest
"Some propositions are true about the physical universe" is undefined. — alcontali
What does 'true' mean in this context? What makes you so certain that the statement is 'true'? — A Seagull
I set out to do something very similar to this. I start out with rejecting two positions that I call fideism and nihilism, the latter of which I take to mean roughly the same thing as saying nothing is true. And the former is something you're probably just taking for granted here: you can't just prove something by assertion. Between the two of those, you get the view that something or another is true, but no claim about what it is can just be taken for true. The result is that everything must be taken as possibly true until we can show that it is false. You can think of this as taking the infinite disjunction of all propositions (A or B or C or D or ...) and then ruling out some of them bit by bit to narrow in on a smaller and smaller disjunction of possibilities. But of course, whittling down an infinite set still leaves you with an infinite set, but you nevertheless "gain knowledge" of what is not the case, even if you will never settle concretely on one specific thing that is the case. — Pfhorrest
Do you think this'll work? — TheMadFool
First I reject all knowledge which may be expressed in the statement A = All propositions are false. — TheMadFool
The theorem applies more generally to any sufficiently strong formal system, showing that truth in the standard model of the system cannot be defined within the system. — Wikipedia on Tarski's undefinability
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