Gödel's incompleteness theorem applies to formal languages with countable alphabets. So it does not rule out the possibility that one might be able to prove 'everything' in a formal system with an uncountable alphabet OR expand the alphabet to account for new variables*. — Shawn
What Gödel proved was a truth that can only be seen in a formal system such as Peano Arithmetic. — Shawn
The rules governing formal systems do not apply to informal systems, — Shawn
where pretty much any instance of applying a new rule to an informal system, can be integrated into the system itself.[/quotes]
I don't know what that is supposed to mean.
— Shawn
There is no incompleteness in nature — Shawn
Einstein had discussions with Gödel about how singularities and indeterminism could partake in physics and nature, which made him think nature was "incomplete," for lack of a better word). — Shawn
until greater understanding is attained about the relation between logic and mathematics, which was an aspiration of many mathematicians and logicians during the war period, which Gödel had negated with his Incompleteness Theorems — Shawn
if we can get past the conclusions of Gödel's Incompleteness Theorem's. — Shawn
Gödel's incompleteness theorem applies to formal languages with countable alphabets. — Shawn
So it does not rule out the possibility that one might be able to prove 'everything' in a formal system with an uncountable alphabet — Shawn
OR expand the alphabet to account for new variables*. — Shawn
No, Godel proved a meta-theorem regarding formal systems of a certain kind, including PA. The proof of that metatheorem can be done in various formal systems or done in ordinary informal mathematics, as is the case with Godel's original proof. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Moreover, the proof make use of only finitistic, intuitionistically acceptable principles. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Incompleteness is a property of certain formal systems. I don't know what it means to say that nature is or is not complete. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Einstein had discussions with Gödel about how singularities and indeterminism could partake in physics and nature, which made him think nature was "incomplete," for lack of a better word.
— Shawn
Who used the word, for lack of a better one? And what is your source? — TonesInDeepFreeze
What "conclusions" do you have in mind? The incompleteness theorem is a mathematical theorem with mathematical corollaries. Of course, some people make philosophical inferences based on the theorem, but such inferences are not of the mathematical theorem itself. — TonesInDeepFreeze
The defintion of 'formal language' includes that the language is countable. — TonesInDeepFreeze
There is no incompleteness in nature — Shawn
This would imply that for every true statement about the physical universe, there exists a proof that can be derived from the supposedly canonical and categorical but unknown theory of the physical universe. — Tarskian
I do not like stating this in formal systems like Peano Arithmetic; but, rather in decidability. By framing the question in terms of decidability, we do away with the problem of the inherent limitations of human intuition devising formal systems. This is a question model theorists might be able to prove, in my opinion. — Shawn
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decidability_(logic)
In logic, a true/false decision problem is decidable if there exists an effective method for deriving the correct answer. Zeroth-order logic (propositional logic) is decidable, whereas first-order and higher-order logic are not.
The problem is logic itself: — Tarskian
I always thought the solution to the problem of insufficient logic needed to compute certain undecidable problems is solved by appealing to greater complexity class sizes, which avoids the inherent limitations of a formal system which is incapable of decidability given its inherent limitations. — Shawn
An undecidable problem in logic is undecidable irrespective of how much time or memory you throw at the problem. The P versus NP issue only applies to problems that are at least logically decidable. — Tarskian
I think you are referencing Rosner. — Shawn
it seems that it relies on a contradiction performed in the system — Shawn
the liar paradox, which Rosner utilizes. — Shawn
II hope that I might have gotten the gist of it. — Shawn
Moreover, the proof make use of only finitistic, intuitionistically acceptable principles.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
I am not denying the logical validity of Godel's Incompleteness Theorems. — Shawn
What Gödel proved was a truth that can only be seen in a formal system such as Peano Arithmetic. — Shawn
the impact or the conclusions mathematicians reached at the time were too profound to the field of mathematics. — Shawn
Well, at the time, many physicists were of the opinion that mathematics governs physics. So, I hypothesized that Einstein was aware of Godel's Incompleteness Theorems, since they had many discussions between each-other. I can only imagine that Einstein was interested in Godel's thoughts about physics according to Godel given his Incompleteness Theorems. — Shawn
What "conclusions" do you have in mind? The incompleteness theorem is a mathematical theorem with mathematical corollaries. Of course, some people make philosophical inferences based on the theorem, but such inferences are not of the mathematical theorem itself.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Sure; well, I won't comment on the effect Godel had on logic and mathematics. There are intellectuals that still ponder about it to this day, since this is a fundamental problem of mathematics at the time when Godel made his discovery. — Shawn
The defintion of 'formal language' includes that the language is countable.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
There are potentially infinitely countable alphabets that could allow one to continuously expand the alphabet by including new terms in the formal system itself according to the principles of the formal system itself. — Shawn
Maybe model theory can actually simulate reality with this possibility in mind. — Shawn
If you allow for higher-order logic then all odds are off and even less can be asserted about the properties of the theories involved, such as incompleteness. — Tarskian
Sure; well, I won't comment on the effect Godel had on logic and mathematics. There are intellectuals that still ponder about it to this day, since this is a fundamental problem of mathematics at the time when Godel made his discovery.
— Shawn
You referred to conclusions that were drawn. But you don't have any in particular to mention. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I always thought the solution to the problem of insufficient logic needed to compute certain undecidable problems is solved by appealing to greater complexity class sizes, which avoids the inherent limitations of a formal system which is incapable of decidability given its inherent limitations. — Shawn
I do not like stating this in formal systems like Peano Arithmetic; but, rather in decidability. — Shawn
everyone concluded that this was the end of the possibility of proving everything in logic — Shawn
It has not been demonstrated that propositional logic is the only logic that could accomplish the goals of unifying logic with mathematics or proving everything in logic alone. — Shawn
Decidability for P verses NP is considered complete and consistent. — Shawn
[the incompleteness theorem] was perceived by many as a hard limit on the ability to understand the world. — Shawn
Not only has it not been demonstrated that propositional logic is not the only logic adequate for that task, but it's overwhelmingly clear that propositional logic is not adequate for that task. — TonesInDeepFreeze
What are complete and consistent, or incomplete or inconsistent are theories, not whatever "decidability for P v NP" is supposed to mean. — TonesInDeepFreeze
So one of the conclusions you are referring to is "incompleteness puts a hard limit on understanding the world"? — TonesInDeepFreeze
It is taken that incompleteness quashes Hilbert's program. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Are there any writers who you think are well paraphrased with that, and what writings of theirs do you have in mind? — TonesInDeepFreeze
one may be able to do so in come other formal language? — Shawn
for a complexity class size to be complete and consistent, such as P v NP, then everything within such a set constitutes a complete and formal theory. — Shawn
at the time Hilbert's program was one instance — Shawn
given the assumption that a sufficiently sophisticated computable logical system with the capacity to compute with an ever expanding alphabet, in hypothetical terms, would be able to simulate reality. Again, this is an ad hoc argument against incompleteness — Shawn
one could call propositional logic complete and even consistent for the complexity class size of P versus NP! — Shawn
I don't know what that is supposed to mean, but, to be clear, the incompleteness theorem applies also to theories in higher order logic. Indeed, Godel's own proof regarded a theory in an omega-order logic. — TonesInDeepFreeze
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second-order_logic
This corollary is sometimes expressed by saying that second-order logic does not admit a complete proof theory. In this respect second-order logic with standard semantics differs from first-order logic; Quine (1970, pp. 90–91) pointed to the lack of a complete proof system as a reason for thinking of second-order logic as not logic, properly speaking.
What are the definitions of 'complete for a complexity class size' and 'consistent for a complexity class size' such that a logic can be complete and consistent for a complexity class size? — TonesInDeepFreeze
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