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, 2) What happens if we can't determine if the truth of a statement is decidable in principle or not? — T Clark
I think that the truth-status of such conjectures is undecidable; that is I can't decide whether we should say they could be true or false, or that they cannot be true or false. — Janus
Seems to me we can assign "true" or "false" to the above sentence without contradiction, so the answer is "yes, there can be sentences that are true or false but undecidable". — Banno
Very little. There are, after all, other things which we not only don't know, but can't know. But we muddle on. — Banno
We can't determine if Caesar stepped into the Rubicon with his left foot. But undoubtedly he either did or din't. — Banno
But history has shown that dialectical and trialectic reasoning - a move towards holism - actually deliver the better results when it comes to the forming of general intuitions. Reductionist predicate logic is what you use more in the next step of forming deductive statements that are then suitable for a process of inductive confirmation, or the experimental test of a bivalently-framed prediction. — apokrisis
So one thing that is clear to any logical holist is that yes/no thinking lacks sufficient sophistication. You need further categories - a third option as an answer, such as yes, no, or vague. — apokrisis
Pragmatism builds that answer in. The theory makes some kind of reductively bivalent claim about reality. It is a good thing to be clear in this way. But then the theory is only ever deemed verified or falsified provisionally. The evidence might lean heavily on way or the other. But always, the fact is that there remains something ambiguous or indeterminate about its truth status. — apokrisis
Then when it comes to quantum theory, we find ourselves bumping up against the fact that nature itself must have this same kind of logical holism. The vagueness that we need to include in our epistemic methodology becomes also a useful third category when we speak of nature “in itself”. — apokrisis
Technically I would say "It may be true or false, but it is extremely likely that it is unknowable." It may just happen that the first planet you look at contains the penny. Extremely unlikely, but not implausible. But that is the way I see truth and falsity. They are independent of our knowledge. — Philosophim
I believe a large part of philosophy is figuring out what we should spend our efforts on pursuing in reality. — Philosophim
IE, if we can never determine even in principle whether the proposition "a multiverse exists" is true or false, then the "multiverse" must remain a fictional entity, as a unicorn or Conan Doyle. — RussellA
Physics practices its own winning brand of metaphysical world-modelling. — apokrisis
What is the difference between "dialectical" and "bivalently-framed?" Is it that with the dialectic, the goal is to reach consensus, while with bivalently-framed, we have to make a choice? — T Clark
That's why I'm so attracted to pragmatism as a way of approaching the world. I am self-aware enough to see that has as much, or more, to do with temperament as it does with reason. — T Clark
I am skeptical of bringing physics into metaphysical arguments. It's often a symptom of wrong-headed thinking. Is that there one of them "category errors.?" Quantum mechanics seems to be a prime candidate for this mistake. — T Clark
Interpretations of QM are interpretations of the physical, though. — Janus
I'm not saying that metaphysical interpretations are not possible, but they are not inevitable and, as far as I am aware, mainstream in the physics community. — Janus
As to the latter, if I understand correctly, it's also the case that the 'decoherence' interpretation... — Janus
They say nothing about what may or may not underlie, or be beyond, the physical, as far as I can tell. — Janus
Interpretations. That is the point. An observation of a physical phenomenon is just that - you register a measurement on an instrument, there's no room for disagreement about the reading. But what it means is wide open to interpretation. — Wayfarer
How is your case furthered by citing all these physicists taking different metaphysical positions? — apokrisis
Physics practices its own winning brand of metaphysical world-modelling. It gets on with what it believes works. — apokrisis
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