The real key to Gödel is that the axioms are recursively enumerable, not countable. We can show there exist maximal consistent subsets of the countable set of all statements, and take those as axioms. Then we can show that maximality implies completeness. It’s just not useful for human or computer-read proofs, because there is no way to algorithmically prove each step is allowed.
If instead of "axiom" you had said wff, as opposed to gibberish, then no question. But an axiom I understand here is an expression, like Godel's sentence, such that neither it nor its negation is provable, yet is also provably true, being proved meta-mathematically. (Else there be false axioms.)That there is a recursive axiomatization of a theory T entails that it is computable whether any given string is or is not an axiom. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Fwiw, or maybe this isn't news to anyone, recursively enumerable is not the same as recursive, and implies non-recursiveness.The real key to Gödel is that the axioms are recursively enumerable,
an axiom I understand here is an expression, like Godel's sentence, such that neither it nor its negation is provable, yet is also provably true, being proved meta-mathematically — tim wood
recursively enumerable is not the same as recursive, and implies non-recursiveness. — tim wood
What do you think — Shawn
With a theory that is recursively axiomatizable, it is computable whether a symbol string is or is not an axiom. — TonesInDeepFreeze
A recursive enumeration does not itself provide a decision procedure for R, but that does not entail that there does not exist a decision procedure for R. — TonesInDeepFreeze
The first part, establishing the closure, matters.With a theory that is recursively axiomatizable, it is computable whether a symbol string is or is not an axiom. — TonesInDeepFreeze
a recursive set is not the same thing as a recursively enumerable set, — tim wood
closure — tim wood
Can you explain this, as I'm quite interested? — Shawn
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