Axiom is a proposition regarded as self-evidently true without proof.
Cat is animal.
Cat is plant.
But after the update, the system has two expressions for the same word cat, which are contradictory.
Cat is animal.
Cat is plant.
But after the update, the system has two expressions for the same word cat, which are contradictory.
This is false. How do we know it is false? Not because "The US House of Representatives," fails to be synonymous with "has 572 members." — Count Timothy von Icarus
Saying, "what if we collected all possible non-analytical truths, and then declared them true by axiom, that will turn them into analytical truths," is totally missing what an analytical truth is. — Count Timothy von Icarus
But our made up language could just as easily contain false axioms. How would we determine which is which? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Expressions of language that are stipulated to be true are from the current correct model of the actual world. If someone says that the current number of members of congress is {a stale bologna sandwich} then they are wrong.
proven completely true entirely on the basis of its meaning
Are they wrong in virtue of the fact that a bologna sandwich was never elected to Congress or are they wrong in virtue of the fact that the database hasn't included that as an axiom? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Ok, so you can have your magic database, and I will make my own. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Might it be that yours is correct because it is true in virtue of how the proposition relates to states of affairs and not the meaning ascribed to some code? — Count Timothy von Icarus
So how do the users know which is which? Do they have to type in the unique GUID into the system to get the correct definition they want?Just like the Cyc project each unique sense meaning has its own unique GUID
9824b3dc-7237-4b4b-9a71-fb788348bc9a for the living animal "Cat"
9f444cef-f49f-4aa8-89bf-248ee5976b92 for "Cat Palm" — PL Olcott
So how do the users know which is which? Do they have to type in the unique GUID into the system to get the correct definition they want?
Or can the Cyc project know which is the right one the user wants to know? How does it do that?
Some users could call cat palm as just "cat", and some may have a cat called "cat palm". — Corvus
Any AI system needs some sort of reasoning logic based on the different domains and hierarchical structure of the data. It is more challenging to implement the reasoning logics onto the natural language based data, because computers cannot handle the human natural languages well, hence converting the data into the axiomatised symbolic formalisation using the semantic frames would be needed? Just guessing.I don't currently know how to handle contentious knowledge. — PL Olcott
Does it handle / process abstract concepts such as God, souls, freedom or immortality?The original version of CycL was a frame language, but the modern version is not. Rather, it is a declarative language based on classical first-order logic, with extensions for modal operators and higher order quantification. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CycL — PL Olcott
This is a good link for the concept "Ontology in Information Science". Thanks.In information science, an ontology encompasses a representation, formal naming, and definitions of the categories, properties, and relations between the concepts, data, or entities that pertain to one, many, or all domains of discourse. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ontology_(information_science) — PL Olcott
In theory is can process any knowledge known to humankind that can be encoded as text strings.
— PL Olcott
How is it different from ChatGPT? — Corvus
Only in the sense that facts can be looked up in an encyclopedia and encyclopedias can be updated with new facts. Actual interaction with the world that requires sense input from the sense organs is specifically excluded from the body of analytic knowledge. That dogs exist is analytic. That there is a small black dog in my living room right now is synthetic. — PL Olcott
You'll have to forgive this bear of little brain, but i can't make any sense of this. How do we know that dogs exist? Can we rule out the possibility of an overnight canine pandemic that killed every dog on the planet via analytic statements? Not that I can see. The only way to determine this is via sense input. — EricH
Dogs exist as conceptual objects even if all of reality is a mere figment of the imagination.
— PL Olcott
So this whole project is merely the embodiment of people's imagination. — EricH
Something is true or false always in relation to some respect. Dogs are animals is false in case of the robot AI dogs. Dogs can be tools in wood carving toolbox. Dogs are pieces of the wooden material that get inserted in the holes of the workbenches to secure a plank of wood to be carved. In this case dogs are animals is false again.Dogs are animals is absolutely true no matter what. — PL Olcott
According to Carnap (Introduction to Semantics, 1941, Harvard University Press) , all sentences and expressions carry implied truth conditions for it being true i.e. 5>2 is true, iff 5>2 in all possible conditions of the universe.5 > 2 remains true even after the heat death of the universe when zero minds exist. — PL Olcott
Something is true or false always in relation to some respect. Dogs are animals is false in case of the robot AI dogs. Dogs can be tools in wood carving toolbox. Dogs are pieces of the wooden material that get inserted in the holes of the workbenches to secure a plank of wood to be carved. In this case dogs are animals is false again. — Corvus
3ab2c577-7d38-4a3c-adc9-c5eff8491282 stands for the living animal dog — PL Olcott
Dogs exist as conceptual objects — PL Olcott
I still can't make any sense of this. Does the Cyc project identifier refer to
- a conceptual object
- a collection of conceptual objects (i.e., how do we know that one person's conception of a dog is the same as another's)
- a particular existing living animal that happens to be a dog
- all living animals that happen to be dogs
- other? — EricH
The use of "analytic" here bears little resemblance to the normal usage. As far as I can tell, any fact is "analytic" so long as it can be defined as true by definition by some string. The analytic normally is "what is true by definition," and apparently non-analytic facts like "Moscow is the current capital of Russia," can become analytic despite the fact that "Moscow" is not synonymous with "the capital of Russia," by simply stipulating an axiom that says "Moscow is the capital of Russia, by definition." — Count Timothy von Icarus
↪Count Timothy von Icarus
That article doesn't properly state the subject matter. — TonesInDeepFreeze
(1) The article conflates a language with a theory.
(2) The proof in the article handwaves past the crucial lemma, thus appearing to commit a serious non sequitur. — TonesInDeepFreeze
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