The first Godel incompleteness theorem states that no consistent system of axioms whose theorems can be listed by an effective procedure (i.e., an algorithm) is capable of proving all truths about the arithmetic of natural numbers. For any such consistent formal system, there will always be statements about natural numbers that are true, but that are unprovable within the system. The second incompleteness theorem, an extension of the first, shows that the system cannot demonstrate its own consistency. — Wikipedia
justification may be 100%, but justification may be not perfect, either.
If no counter-examples are found, and no proof is presented, then the justification is not perfect, but accepted as true.
For instance, if you substract a positive number from a larger positive number, you get a positive number. There is no proof for this, despite it ensuing from mathematical axioms. No proof, but then again, nobody can find a counter-example for it, either. — god must be atheist
How is it then that a statement like (refer highlighted section of quote above): "true, but that are unprovable" occur in Godel's incompleteness theorem. — TheMadFool
Justified True Belief (JTB) : Knowledge of proposition P = P is true, P is justified and you believe P. — TheMadFool
Hence, mathematics are justified beliefs, but not justified true beliefs. — alcontali
Using a clever hack, Gödel manages to create a theorem that is algebraically "true" in the abstract, Platonic world of number theory, but which by simply asserting its own unprovability, is not provable from the construction logic of that world. Hence, true but not provable. — alcontali
?algebraically "true" — alcontali
If a proposition P is true then necessarily that a proof must exist for P being true. — TheMadFool
Armed with this, it's then possible (in a completely proper mathematical way, not just conceptually) to make statements such as "This theorem is unprovable" and then show we can't prove that theorem with the axiom. But it's a true statements!!! We know it's true because we proved that it's unprovable, there's just no axiomatic way to prove it. — boethius
If "this theorem T is unprovable" is proof, as you say, then doesn't that mean it's provable after all and that too within the axiomatic system? — TheMadFool
Yes (that's a good question) and why the phrases "inside and outside the system" come up.
"Inside the system" the theorem isn't provable, there's no problem; the axioms are content to just leave it at that. It's only us outside the system that we realize that if the system can't deal with that statement, then that statement is actually true.
It's basically the liar paradox but there are two different systems to evaluate the theorem, whereas the liar paradox is fully "in our minds" and we can't look at it "outside the system it's expressed in".
So, "within the system" we can follow Godels axioms and statements to arrive at a completely proper conclusion. We need to use reasoning "outside the system" (that are not based on the axioms of the system) to arrive at the conclusion the statement is actually true. We can't do this with the liar paradox and so cannot do a similar thing to conclude it's actually true, as if it's true then it's false; incompleteness is a version of this idea that somehow works out due to these nuances of building it in a system that is smaller and weaker than our own minds and these nuances of "unprovable" doesn't necessarily mean "false"; so saying that statement is "actually true" doesn't make a contradiction with the truth value within the system which just says "unknown (as far as these axioms are concerned)"; i.e. if I say "I don't know if it's raining outside" isn't contradicted by you coming and saying "it's raining". — boethius
"This statement is true but unprovable what does "this" refer to? — TheMadFool
Answer: itself. Godel's sentence is an expression of mathematics that can be expressed - roughly - in English. In Godel's paper the sentence reads "17 gen r." What does 17 gen r say? That 17 gen r is not provable. See, no problem with "this" at all.
It's useless to go into this stuff without some knowledge of it - but that is not all that hard to come by, if you're actually interested. — tim wood
Proof does not establish truth, it establishes justification. However, since mathematics is the science of drawing necessary conclusions about hypothetical states of affairs (Peirce), there is a sense in which mathematical justification is equivalent to mathematical truth. A sentence is "true" within a consistent formal system as long as it does not contradict the underlying assumptions (axioms). A sentence is "undecidable" within that same system if it can neither be proved nor disproved on the basis of those particular axioms.I sensed that there wasn't the required level of correspondence between Godel's incompleteness theorems (GIT) and the justified true belief (JTB) of philosophy. The shared characteristic between the two I was hoping to emphasize was the need for proof to establish truth. — TheMadFool
No, it is called a theorem because Gödel provided a proof; otherwise, it would be called a hypothesis or conjecture. Fermat's conjecture came to be known as a theorem because he claimed to have a proof, which no one ever found; Andrew Wiles finally came up with one in 1994.@TheMadFool (et al) this is a theorem by Godel, not a proof. — god must be atheist
No, it is called a theorem because Gödel provided a proof — aletheist
Thanks for asking. The Greek word for "truth" is transliterated aletheia, so I call myself "aletheist" because I believe that there is such a thing as (absolute) truth.By-the-by: what does your moniker mean? — god must be atheist
Transliterated from the actual Greek work αλήθεια.Transliterated or translated? — god must be atheist
Thanks; but then, the denial that there is such a thing as (absolute) truth is self-refuting.Noble conviction you have. — god must be atheist
Transliterated from the actual Greek work αλήθεια. — aletheist
The Greek word for "truth" is transliterated aletheia, — aletheist
aletheist claims that proofs are sufficient but not necessary for truth.
god must be atheist claims that that truth can be based on the absence of counterexamples.
Where do the two of you stand on each other's claims? Thanks. — TheMadFool
Proofs are sufficient, but not necessary, for justification.Proof does not establish truth, it establishes justification. — aletheist
Justification can be based on the absence of counterexamples.... lack of counter-examples constitute a reason believe that something is true, or justified in belief. — god must be atheist
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