guptanishank         
         
Meta         
         
guptanishank         
         
Banno         
         Can all the truths which can be established under an axiomatic system be discovered by mathematics? — guptanishank
guptanishank         
         
Banno         
         
Michael         
         Because true statements have to be proven as true? — guptanishank
guptanishank         
         
Michael         
         In math however if a statement is unproven, we cannot "know", if it was one of these fundamental preexisting truths or not. — guptanishank
guptanishank         
         
sime         
         
fdrake         
         
guptanishank         
         
sime         
         Thank you fdrake and others!
Just one last thing:
Where does the law of excluded middle fit into all this?
A statement must be either true or false.
So if it is unprovable, within a formal axiomatic system, and you cannot decide it's truth value even by going outside the system, what value do you assign to that statement?
How does this fit within the context of Godel's theorems? — guptanishank
fishfry         
         Well, when they came out they were a massive 'fuck you' to the Hilbert Program — fdrake
andrewk         
         Godel's theorem does not say that we cannot prove the statement by going outside the system. Indeed, for the unprovable statements often considered in this context, they can be proved by moving to a meta-system that is larger than the original one and consistent with it. The problem is that there will then be new statements in that meta-system that cannot be proved or disproved (are 'undecidable') in that system. So we need to move to a meta-meta-system to decide those. No matter how many times we do this, the system we end up with will contain new undecidable statements.So if it is unprovable, within a formal axiomatic system, and you cannot decide it's truth value even by going outside the system, what value do you assign to that statement?
How does this fit within the context of Godel's theorems? — guptanishank
guptanishank         
         Indeed, historians have recently discovered a cache of previously unpublished letters between Gödel and Hilbert. I take the liberty of summarizing them here.
Godel: Fick dich!
Hilbert: Oh no mein freund. Fick DICH!!
Gödel: Fick dich to the n-th power!
Hilbert: Und deine Mutter auch!
etc. — fishfry
fdrake         
         
guptanishank         
         
T Clark         
         Godel's theorem does not say that we cannot prove the statement by going outside the system. Indeed, for the unprovable statements often considered in this context, they can be proved by moving to a meta-system that is larger than the original one and consistent with it. The problem is that there will then be new statements in that meta-system that cannot be proved or disproved (are 'undecidable') in that system. So we need to move to a meta-meta-system to decide those. No matter how many times we do this, the system we end up with will contain new undecidable statements. — andrewk
Shawn         
         Godel's theorem does not say that we cannot prove the statement by going outside the system. Indeed, for the unprovable statements often considered in this context, they can be proved by moving to a meta-system that is larger than the original one and consistent with it. The problem is that there will then be new statements in that meta-system that cannot be proved or disproved (are 'undecidable') in that system. So we need to move to a meta-meta-system to decide those. No matter how many times we do this, the system we end up with will contain new undecidable statements. — andrewk
fdrake         
         
Shawn         
         
andrewk         
         
Shawn         
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