I can't decide whether the question as to whether propositions that are undecidable for us can nonetheless be true or false is itself undecidable or not, — Janus
Can a statement be true or false if it is not possible to determine which it is, even in principle? — T Clark
1) Can a statement be true or false if it is not possible to determine which it is, even in principle? — T Clark
I want to clarify this. Do you mean we have an idea that we can conceivably prove to be true or false, but we don't currently have the means to do it? Or do you mean an idea that we have no conceivable means of even trying to prove it true or false? — Philosophim
I think the multiverse interpretation of quantum mechanics is meaningless because I believe it is not possible to demonstrate if it is true or false, but, I can't prove it is not possible. Given that, what is the status of the multiverse interpretation. — T Clark
If A is true, then b is true by consequence. But it could happen that tomorrow mankind discovers multiverse theory is true or false. Therefore this proposal is more of a prediction such as, "Tomorrow the sun will rise again." As such, the only thing we can do in this case is wait. Maybe humanity will discover the truth about multiverse theory, and maybe they won't. — Philosophim
Since there is no evidence whether it is possible to determine the truth or falseness of the multiverse interpretation of QM, should that interpretation be given serious consideration as a scientific theory? — T Clark
I'm still thinking about it — T Clark
Question 1) Can a statement be true or false if it is not possible to determine which it is, even in principle?
Statement 1) Since there is no evidence whether it is possible to determine the truth or falseness of the multiverse interpretation of QM, should that interpretation be given serious consideration as a scientific theory? — T Clark
I can't decide whether the question as to whether propositions that are undecidable for us can nonetheless be true or false is itself undecidable or not — Janus
There may be no evidence today determining the truth or falseness of the multiverse interpretation of QM, but there may be evidence next year. As Philosophim wrote: "Maybe humanity will discover the truth about multiverse theory, and maybe they won't" — RussellA
This doesn't seem to lead anywhere, because it involves a vicious epistemic circle. Truth or falsity are established in the framework of some epistemic standards. Janus's statement questions one epistemic standard, which is fine, but the resolution will require some other epistemic standards, distinct from the one that is being questioned. — SophistiCat
The following are neither true nor false:
1. Cook
2 Kplx zgfd
3. This sentence is false (liar sentence)
4. &×* — TheMadFool
Then, as per you, the following too are neither true nor false:
1. Free will exists
2. God doesn't exist
. — TheMadFool
Am I missing something? — TheMadFool
So, the answer to T Clark's question is yes, a proposition such as "there is a god beyond our comprehension" not only can be true or false but must be either true or false. — RussellA
In answer to SophistiCat's question as to where does this lead, it leads to the knowledge that there are some things that are beyond our comprehension. — RussellA
An example would be helpful if you can think of one. — T Clark
how do you judge whether a proposition is true or false — SophistiCat
decidable or undecidable — SophistiCat
That's the question I'm wrestling with. I think, although I'm not sure, that there's a standard that has to be met. It's like they say, you can't prove a negative. There has to be a point where I stop and say "We've found no evidence. We can't see any way of testing this hypothesis. That's the best we can do." I don't know if we are at that place yet with the QM multiverse interpretation or, say, string theory. It is my understanding that many scientists think we are. — T Clark
(When you talk about interpretations of quantum mechanics, for example, it sounds like you mean the latter, to the exclusion of any other standard.) — SophistiCat
There has to be a point where I stop and say "We've found no evidence. We can't see any way of testing this hypothesis. That's the best we can do." I don't know if we are at that place yet with the QM multiverse interpretation or, say, string theory. It is my understanding that many scientists think we are. — T Clark
I'm still working on a response. — T Clark
1, 2, and 4 are not propositions. — T Clark
how do you judge whether a proposition is true or false — SophistiCat
Justification — T Clark
It is my understanding that all interpretations of QM are equivalent in that they have not been verified and may not be verifiable. — T Clark
1) Can a statement be true or false if it is not possible to determine which it is, even in principle? Then, if we can decide that question — T Clark
) What happens if we can't determine if the truth of a statement is decidable in principle or not? — T Clark
Yep.
Aesthetics? — Banno
Then Janus came up with this, which set me thinking: — T Clark
The subject where this issue most often comes to mind for me is interpretations of quantum mechanics and, in particular, the multiverse interpretation. In my mind, unless there is an experiment or theoretical development that can determine which interpretation is correct, then anything beyond the Shut Up and Calculate Interpretation is meaningless. — T Clark
Imagine if people knew for certain God was a fairy tale? — TheMadFool
But a lie is false.
@T Clark's question is about statements the truth of which are indeterminate. A lie does not have an indeterminate truth value. It is false. — Banno
Metaphysical statements are taken as true, but unjustified. — Banno
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