I don't know if you've visited the 21st century at all, but women can earn money for themselves now... — Isaac
But I grow cynical whenever I hear politicians advocating for the welfare state, especially under the guise of compassion. Paying more taxes and advocating for more government services seems to me to be the very least one can do for his fellow man. — NOS4A2
What is really described by this theory is some form of order arising from another form of order, not order arising from disorder. — Metaphysician Undercover
Maybe you didn't know that Nobel prizes might be given to deceivers. — Metaphysician Undercover
However this isn't chaos giving rise to order. Anyway I can now conceive of order arising from chaos but such events would be improbable and short-lived. Of course we mustn't forget the qualifier "relative" for "improbable" and "short-lived". — TheMadFool
And you weren't? Come now... How is it that you and you alone managed to overcome the deception and manipulation that was visited upon you, and that nobody else in the world could overcome? — Bitter Crank
Kindly clarify how order may arise from chaos. I thought it was the other way around. — TheMadFool
The government will not merely TRY to make you give up resources for aged atheists, they will be successful in making you pay for the luxurious assisted living and skilled care homes we shall require. — Bitter Crank
Actually I was wondering which century you were living in. Seems to be something of a perception-distorting time warp going on here. — Bitter Crank
There is quite a bit of evidence that affluence is a key factor in people opting to have fewer -- far fewer -- children. The theory is that with high survival rates among their children, redundant children are not necessary -- the ones they have will survive. — Bitter Crank
Further, affluent people don't have to worry about not having children to care for them when they are old and feeble. Affluent people can hire poor people to that sort of work at affordable prices. — Bitter Crank
I think one can make an argument (I don't have any stats for it) that it is affluence that leads to atheism. — Bitter Crank
As I said, your example of game theory starts with the existence of things, which itself implies order. So the theories you refer to do not describe order coming from disorder, only one form of order coming from another form of order. If you believe that these theories describe order coming from disorder, you have been misled. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, I've noticed that mathematics has made incredible progress in misleading people. Luckily I'm not one of them. You ought to learn how to read these theories more critically and free yourself from the binds of such deception. — Metaphysician Undercover
That's true, but still...some people need special rules for dealing with almost anything! :gasp: — Janus
I actually don't know how the syntactic incompleteness was proven (through the same meta-logical argument as its semantic counterpart or not), but it seems that you shouldn't need a lot of semantics in order to demonstrate that some statement is independent. If the statement's derivation involves circularity (like the Gödel sentence), it should be entirely a deductive property if this circularity can be eliminated or not. But I might be wrong. — simeonz
I still don't understand the distinction you're looking for. You're obviously not seriously suggesting that there aren't any deontologists, that no one is a utilitarian... That would be absurd. So what is the distinction you're trying to make between people who have read, say, Kant, and try to follow his method, and people who have read, say, the Bible, and try to follow its methods? — Isaac
Well, in the published works of the relevant philosophers, of course.
You're still not being clear here about what you mean. I'm trying to be as charitable as possible and assume that you're not so poorly educated that you don't even know that people have written books about ethics, but I'm really struggling to understand your question outside of that interpretation. — Isaac
So, as you stated, if ZFC were complete it would be decidable. But since it is not, does my original question - if it is decidable or not still stand? — simeonz
However, since the Gödel sentence cannot itself formally specify its intended interpretation, the truth of the sentence GF may only be arrived at via a meta-analysis from outside the system. — Wikipedia
This contradicts the summary, by clearly stating that validity is not the subject of the theorem. — simeonz
The problem with this analogy is that you already assume the existence of "a thing", and this implies order. "A thing" is an ordered existence. Lack of order would actually mean a lack of things. In Aristotelian terms a lack of order would simply be the "potential" for existence of a thing. So if you are describing how order comes out of non-order, you cannot start with the existence of a thing, because this is to presume the existence of order already. — Metaphysician Undercover
Maybe you do believe this, but you seem to misunderstand what "chaos", or complete lack of order really entails. — Metaphysician Undercover
My understanding from the definition was that for a theory to be decidable, it is necessary to have effective enumeration of its theorems, not to have a theorem for every statement or its negation. — simeonz
defending Europe from Moslem armies — Bitter Crank
We can run an experiment with two rooms A and B. A is in disarray with things in no particular order and B is neat and objects have been arranged in a discernable pattern. If someone, anyone, were to be taken into the two rooms and asked which room probably had an occupant then the answer would invariably be room B. I don't think anyone will/can disagree with this deduction. — TheMadFool
I also couldn't clear up if ZFC is decidable, undecidable, or not yet established. Wikipedia indicates that there are only decidable sublanguages, while a stackexchange answer indicates that ZFC is recursively enumerable, which if mu-recursively enumerable, should mean that ZFC is decidable by Turing machines. — simeonz
Since the semantic incompleteness proof holds for the standard model, what is the "intended" interpretation for other theories. — simeonz
I find the Curry-Howard Correspondence a little strange. I'm sure it makes sense, but likening axioms to a pre-execution invariant and theorems to a post-execution invariant appears complicated. It may have something to do with formal verification processes, but for me, the relationship between proofs and computation appears to be about enumeration of proofs by turing machines in one direction, and the generation of booleans on the Turing tape for the proven theorems after every inference step in the other direction. — simeonz
I think that's mistaken. Modern scientific atheism, of the kind advocated by popular science commentators, is constructed from the hollowed-out shell of Christian philosophy. — Wayfarer
I don’t see where you’re coming from with this whole “atheists don’t have systems” thing. For myself, my philosophy is extremely systemic, probably more so than is academically popular in Anglophone countries today, and I end up being an atheist as a consequence of that system. — Pfhorrest
Well yes, but we're clearly not talking about the same thing because it's absolutely obvious that there are - several brands of deontology, utilitarianism (negative utilitarianism, motive utilitarianism... ), virtue ethics (in dozensof different forms). I mean the vast majority of ethical systems don't involve God. So what is it you're getting at? — Isaac
Utilitarianism and Kantianism both make no reference to gods and so are entirely practicable by atheists. — Pfhorrest
But if so, I still don't understand what you could possibly mean by this. To take morality (the system you alluded to) there's dozens of atheistic moral systems (moral systems which do not involve God), in fact probably more than there are religious ones. So why aren't these counting in your estimations? — Isaac
If I understand you correctly, there are axiomatic systems which preserve the truth values of all statements of Peano arithmetic, but make previously undecidable statements decidable? — simeonz
So, we don't actually have an axiomatic system yet, in which all statements of Peano arithmetic are decidable? — simeonz
Isn't this just another way of saying the Quran is miraculous - the faculty of reason being incapable of producing the Quran? — TheMadFool
So, doesn't that prove my point that some form of miracle is necessary if to be a prophet? — TheMadFool
I personally don't accept miracles as evidence for the simple reason that advanced knowledge masquerades as miracles. — TheMadFool
They say the Quran is the miracle of Muhammad. Why? What's so miraculous about the Quran? — TheMadFool
Correct but the original sources (prophets and books) are supposedly verified through miracles which people seem to accept as true. The next generation of preachers rely on these primary sources for their own authenticity. Right? — TheMadFool
Therefore we cannot prove a statement that cannot be proven in this axiomatic system is semantically true, and to the extent of our logical method, this new axiomatic system can never be proven incomplete. — simeonz
If no true but unprovable X has been found to satisfy "X ↔ isNotProvable(%X)", then why should we consider it to be a satisifiable definition? — Andrew M
Also, would "X ↔ isNotTrue(%X)" be considered a satisifiable definition? I assume not, but that then raises the question of the criteria for judging that a definition is satisfiable. — Andrew M
OK, so my understanding is that one sentence that hits (true,true) for isNotProvable is the sentence that asserts that it is itself not provable. How is that expressed as a mathematical sentence? — Andrew M
Also, why is it thought to be true? — Andrew M
Is it simply that assuming that it is provable leads to contradiction? — Andrew M
OK, so to go back to the third step in your initial post, K could be isNegative. And so isNegative(%M) is false. Then, per the fourth step, any false sentence will have the property isNegative. — Andrew M
Given the above, it seems that there doesn't have to be a true statement that is not provable. There could instead be a false statement that is provable. So it would be a choice between incompleteness and unsoundness? — Andrew M
But how about the property isNegativeNumber? That property will never be true. — Andrew M
This is the part I don't understand. How is this proved? — Andrew M
How do you feel about all the preachers indoctrinators proselytizers out there, then?
4th Grade Science Quiz (David Mikkelson, Snopes, Apr 2013) — jorndoe
But if this is just an analogy for something like a referee, then the origin of logic would still need to be explained. — Teaisnice
I'll let you and Dingo hash the political issues out, in the meantime and in a similar way, I think you would agree that here in America our currency suggests the merits of Deity tipping the scales in favor of Christianity. — 3017amen
And if religious people control the government, wouldnt they be the ones imposing? Wouldnt they be imposing on the atheists? Wouldnt they be imposing on other religions with different practices? — DingoJones