Contrary to a claim made in this thread (and made by the same poster several other times in this forum), it is not the case the Godel sentence requires that there is a sequence of inference steps that prove that they don't exist (as has been explained several other times in this forum). — TonesInDeepFreeze
More generally, Godel's and Tarski's proofs do not have the defects claimed in this thread (and claimed by the same poster several other times in this forum). That can be verified by reading an introductory textbook on mathematical logic in which the groundwork and proofs of Godel-Rosser incompleteness and Tarski undefinability are provided. — TonesInDeepFreeze
"Did you lie?" doesn't have a truth value, because it is not a declarative sentence. Indeed, interrogatory sentences do not appear as lines in proofs. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Your statement here sounds nonsense. Some questions can be for true or false. For example,"You lied, didn't you?" This means you lied, and it is true. It is also to mean you should be aware of the fact that you lied. — Corvus
Proofs don't "hide" things. From fully declared axioms and rules of inference, we may prove Godel-Rosser. We may prove versions that do not mention semantics. And we may prove versions that mention both syntax and semantics. This is all famous and understood by reading an introductory textbook in mathematical logic. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Regarding Tarski's undefinablity theorem, Tarski proved that in certain systems, there does not even exist such a sentence. Not only did Tarski not use such sentences as a basis, he actually proved that such sentences don't even exist in the relevant systems. To not understand that is to not understand what the theorem is even about. — TonesInDeepFreeze
There is no proof of G in F.
That's the point.
Too miss that point is to utterly not know what the theorem is about. — TonesInDeepFreeze
A theory T is incomplete if and only if there is a sentence S in the language for T such that neither S nor its negation are a theorem of T. — TonesInDeepFreeze
No self-contradiction is provable in a consistent theory, irrespective of incompleteness. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Godel never said any such nonsense that if a system proves a contradiction then the system is incomplete. Indeed, if a system proves a contradiction then the system is complete. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Again, however one characterizes the Godel sentence, it is not a contradiction. Indeed it is a true sentence of arithmetic. — TonesInDeepFreeze
When G asserts its own unprovability in F the proof of G in F does require a sequence of inference steps in F that prove that they themselves do not exist. We at the meta-math level can see that there cannot possibly be such a proof of G in F thus we know that the assertion that G is unprovable in F is true.
That unhides the whole essence of Gödel's proof where we can see WHY G is unprovable in F not merely THAT G is unprovable in F. — PL Olcott
Mathematical logic does not assign "fault". Fault though would be vital to assign if one were a judge in a traffic accident case. — TonesInDeepFreeze
The Godel sentence is not a contradiction and it is not nonsense. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I cannot provide for progress in a conversation by repeating refutations and explanations that are ignored while what has been refuted is simply reasserted. — TonesInDeepFreeze
No important point has been ignored. It's the other way around. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I cannot provide for progress in a conversation by repeating that I cannot provide for progress in a conversation by repeating refutations and explanations that are ignored while what has been refuted is simply reasserted. — TonesInDeepFreeze
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