The crank — Lionino
1. If something is possibly necessary, is it necessary?
Under S5 (one type of modal logic), the answer is "yes". — Michael
wut? axiom of infinity. what's wrong with you tonight? — fishfry
The converse of the axiom of extensionality where he says that the converse "follows from the substitution property of equality." — fishfry
enderton page ref please or st*u. second time i'm calling your bluff on references to your magic identity theory. — fishfry
That might be. I'm speaking in broad terms about them in that regard. If the article draws a needed distinction then I should say that they are at least akin. — TonesInDeepFreeze
They did say that "Leibniz’s Law must be clearly distinguished from the substitutivity principle ..." so perhaps that's pushback to your claim. — fishfry
But there are actually two principles — fishfry
So in set theory Ax x=x is redundant.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
in which case you agree with my main point and there is nothing more to say. — fishfry
So I appreciate that you are now writing much shorter posts — fishfry
I can't keep up. — fishfry
So I saw a ref to equality on 112 of enderton that had nothing to do with set theory — fishfry
This is my point. — fishfry
The Enderton reference was to the identity axioms. See page 112 in the logic book. And also, on page 83, he specifies satisfaction regarding '=' so that it adheres to interpreting '=' as the identity relation. — TonesInDeepFreeze
And you studied with Shoenfield. On page 21 lines 13 and 15 of his book you will see the equality axioms that are the indiscernibility of identicals, similar to the way I formalized and that you asked why I posted it. — TonesInDeepFreeze
a trip to the moon on gossamer wings — fishfry
Only countably many interpretations of each sentence. — fishfry
I'll ask again:
But if you start from that there is no bijection, and then prove it by:
If there is a bijection then there is a surjection
There is no surjection.
Therefore, there is no bijection.
Isn't that a proof by contradiction?
— ssu — ssu
Cantor's diagonal argument says that any list of reals is incomplete. We can prove it directly by showing that any list of reals (not an assumed complete list, just any arbitary list) is necessarily missing the antidiagonal. Therefore there is no list of all the reals. — fishfry
theories (interpretations) — fishfry
w can be defined such that it is the limit of the sequence of the natural numbers. — fishfry
The head sophist at TPF, TIDF, continues to defend sophistry by arguing that intelligible objects are consistent with the law of identity.
— Metaphysician Undercover
Drat those sophists. Are they in the room with us right now?
Oh I see. Tones. — fishfry
Too late to wriggle out — fishfry
Ah, you have 'fessed up after all. — fishfry
You are making more of this than I intended for you to make. — fishfry
I'm mocking you for saying that you agreed with a point I made — fishfry
I have a bad habit of tweaking and needling people — fishfry
I don't know "nothing" about the matter. I know logic as it's used in math, but did not study enough formal predicate logic. Indiscernibility of identicals I know of in other contexts, and am genuinely surprised to hear that it's incorporated into set theory. — fishfry
We were talking about how '=' is interpreted.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
It's interpreted as the axiom of extensionality in set theory. Which doesn't actually require identity, and I've asked for a specific example to prove otherwise. — fishfry
If I have two sets, and I want to know if they're equal, I apply extensionality. Not identity. — fishfry
I ask for a clear clear clear clear clear refutation or counterexample. — fishfry
C1 is a premise.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
It’s not, it’s a valid inference from the premises. — Michael
rantings — fishfry
Rather than sorting out your questions in this disparate manner, it would be better - a lot easier - to share a common reference such as one of the widely used textbooks in mathematical logic. I think Enderton's 'A Mathematical Introduction To Logic' is as good as can be found. And for set theory, his 'Elements Of Set Theory'. — TonesInDeepFreeze
(4) You said yourself that you recognize that set theory is based on first order logic. Set theory is based on first order logic with equality. That is what identity theory is, as I've said before. Whether called 'identity theory' or 'first order logic with equlality', it's the same set of axioms.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Ok — fishfry
You have MUCH BETTER REASONS than I do. Ok. — fishfry
And you studied with Shoenfield. On page 21 lines 13 and 15 of his book you will see the equality axioms that are the indiscernibility of identicals, similar to the way I formalized and that you asked why I posted it.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
I admitted to being a logic slacker. — fishfry
I no longer know what we were talking about. — fishfry
Of course it is. It's an axiom. It says what is true about all the things we call sets. Therefore we can characterize the world of things into sets and non-sets, according to whether they satisfy the axiom. So axioms serve as definitions and vice versa. They are the same thing. — fishfry
Then I went on to explain how there are other ways to set up the logic and the set theory axioms so that a different version of extensionality would be a definition.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
That's fine, but that's one of the points where you lose me. Why do you care, or why do you think your doing so will make me understand something I didn't understand before? — fishfry
I've never heard of identity theory except in the context of many of the Wiki disambiguations. And when I showed you the most likely meaning, you rejected it. So I have no idea what identity theory is. — fishfry
Yes, of course, set theory has non-logical axioms, so set theory is not just first order logic with identity.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
I don't recall even having an opinion about this, let alone expressing it in this thread. — fishfry
But if set theory adds an axiom, then clearly it is not the same thing. It's something else, a new thing. — fishfry
I said reasons and you said better reasons? Ok. Your reasons are much better than my reasons for believing things we both agree on. — fishfry
Every attempt I make to understand you is wrong. So maybe just give up because I don't get it. — fishfry
We need the law of identity, but we also need the indiscernibility of identicals.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Not really. — fishfry
So, I mentioned that, for example, from the axiom of extensionality alone we cannot prove:
(x = y & y = z) -> x = z
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Of course we can, straight from the axiom. — fishfry
Moreover, we want to ensure that '=' stands not just for an equivalence relation but for, indeed, the identity relation.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
The identity relation is an equivalence relation. — fishfry
EVERY idea I toss out to try to relate to what you're saying, you reject. — fishfry
To get all the needed identity theorems, we need both the law of identity and the indiscernibility of identicals.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Irrelevant to anything I can relate to, in this conversation or in general. — fishfry
And to do that we have to make the semantic stipulation that '=' is interpreted as standing for the identity relation on the universe.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
I never stipulated to it. — fishfry
I have no idea what "the lamp" is. — fishfry
P1. Nothing happens to the lamp except what is caused to happen to it by pushing the button
P2. If the lamp is off and the button is pushed then the lamp is turned on
P3. If the lamp is on and the button is pushed then the lamp is turned off
P4. The lamp is off at 10:00 — Michael
if A and B are both sets
use extensionality from set theory
else
use identity from logic — fishfry
I don't know how I could be more clear about that. Explicity:
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Ok at this point, I am wondering: Why are you telling me this? I don't understand what you want me to know about this. What problem are we trying to solve? — fishfry
I am certain I never said we don't need identity! — fishfry
I'm all for the law of identity. A thing is equal to itself. That's good do know. In fact it helps make equality an equivalence relation with exactly one item per equivalence class. — fishfry
Alas. — fishfry
I have no idea what pickle you see.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Then my attempt to explain my take on the subject we're discussing failed. — fishfry
If that is the price of conversing further with you on these matters — fishfry
I will agree with you that identity is implicitly in extensionality, in the sense that two sets are equal if they have the "same" elements. — fishfry
We need identity to know when two elements are the same. — fishfry
Now, since the elements of sets are other sets (barring urelements for the moment), I can see that there's a bit of a pickle. I''m not sure how this pickle is resolved. — fishfry
Perhaps this is what you're trying to explain to me.
Is it? — fishfry
first is assumed that all reals, lets say on the range, (0 to 1) can be listed — ssu
first is assumed that all reals, lets say on the range, (0 to 1) can be listed — ssu