Incompleteness says that there are tautologies which can't be derived (as theorems). — fdrake
I'm no expert on this stuff but every tautology has a proof. Incompleteness involves propositions that aren't tautologies, whose truth value varies with the model. For example the axioms for a group say nothing about whether the group is Abelian. The statement "xy = yx for all x, y" is true in some models and not in others. So the group axioms are not complete. — fishfry
(4) A system is consistent if it proves no contradictions (statements false in every model). — fdrake
But if a system is inconsistent, it has no model at all; so the claim that a contradiction is false in every model doesn't make sense to me. — fishfry
Sorry for all the confusion. I edited the post you quoted to explain a contradiction as "(statements which are always false)" — fdrake
Gordon Ramsey's Perfect Scrambled Eggs recipe to allow you to also cook Gordon Ramsey's Perfect Beef Tenderloin. — fdrake
Darn. I am afraid I have to be picky again. A contradiction is not false. A contradiction is a pair of syntactic derivations, one of some statement P and the other of not-P. There is no truth or falsity in syntax. — fishfry
That is incorrect. It is not the case that for every formula, either FOL proves the formula or FOL proves the negation of the formula. That result is known as Church's theorem. — GrandMinnow
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.