godelian wrote: ↑Sun Nov 17, 2024 4:49 pm
It is again and obviously you who fail to understand Taski!
You can keep lying to yourself about that...
Your commentary server as a great demonstration of confirmation bias. Even in Mathematics.
You are using Tarski's negative result to jump to a positive conclusion that confirms your preexisting belief about mathematical truth.
godelian wrote: ↑Sun Nov 17, 2024 4:49 pm
Tarski's undefinability theorem proves that it is not possible to define in arithmetic a predicate true(⌜s⌝) that will be able to compute the truth of any arbitrary sentence s. There does not exist a predicate φ(n) as such that ∀s ( φ(⌜s⌝) ⟺ s ).
Exactly! This tells you the ABSENCE of a predicate to determine truth.
So how can somethign LACKING a truth-predicate be true ?!?
godelian wrote: ↑Sun Nov 17, 2024 4:49 pm
Tarski's undefinability theorem is about the impossibility to define the truth as a predicate.
PRECISELY YOUR FUCKING PROBLEM.
Tarski's theorem tells us where truth CANNOT be defined (within the system), but offers no positive account of where truth CAN be defined, HOW truth can be defined, WHY any mathematical statement is actually true or what mathematical truth actually IS.
godelian wrote: ↑Sun Nov 17, 2024 4:49 pm
The truth can only be defined as a model.
Non-sequitur....
Tarski's theorem tells us where truth CANNOT be defined (within the system), but offers no positive account of where truth CAN be defined, HOW truth can be defined, WHY any mathematical statement is actually true or what mathematical truth actually IS.
godelian wrote: ↑Sun Nov 17, 2024 4:49 pm
It means that either both theories are consistent or both theories are inconsistent.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equiconsistency
In mathematical logic, two theories are equiconsistent if the consistency of one theory implies the consistency of the other theory, and vice versa. In this case, they are, roughly speaking, "as consistent as each other".
So you can call them equiinconsistent - just the same. They stand or fall together.
This has nothing to do with proving they actually stand.
godelian wrote: ↑Sun Nov 17, 2024 4:49 pm
In general, it is not possible to prove the absolute consistency of a theory T. Instead we usually take a theory S, believed to be consistent, and try to prove the weaker statement that if S is consistent then T must also be consistent—if we can do this we say that T is consistent relative to S. If S is also consistent relative to T then we say that S and T are equiconsistent.
Yeah... you working on the premise that the absence of evidence for inconsistency is as good as consistency.
That's a non-seqitur.
godelian wrote: ↑Sun Nov 17, 2024 4:49 pm
Tarski's undefinability theorem proves that it is not possible to define in arithmetic a predicate true(⌜s⌝) that will be able to compute the truth of any arbitrary sentence s. There does not exist a predicate φ(n) as such that ∀s ( φ(⌜s⌝) ⟺ s ).
Exactly! That's a negative result!
And yet here you are giving positive account of Mathematical truths. Despite Tarski proving that's an undefinable notion.
godelian wrote: ↑Sun Nov 17, 2024 4:49 pm
Tarski's undefinability theorem is about the impossibility to define the truth as a predicate.
PRECISELY YOUR FUCKING PROBLEM.
Tarski's theorem tells us where truth CANNOT be defined (within the system), but offers no positive account of where truth CAN be defined, HOW truth can be defined, WHY any mathematical statement is actually true or what mathematical truth actually IS.
godelian wrote: ↑Sun Nov 17, 2024 4:49 pm
The truth can only be defined as a model.
Non-sequitur....
Tarski's theorem tells us where truth CANNOT be defined (within the system), but offers no positive account of where truth CAN be defined, HOW truth can be defined, WHY any mathematical statement is actually true or what mathematical truth actually IS.
godelian wrote: ↑Sun Nov 17, 2024 4:49 pm
It means that either both theories are consistent or both theories are inconsistent.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equiconsistency
In mathematical logic, two theories are equiconsistent if the consistency of one theory implies the consistency of the other theory, and vice versa. In this case, they are, roughly speaking, "as consistent as each other".
So you can call them equiinconsistent - just the same. They stand or fall together.
This has nothing to do with proving they actually stand.
godelian wrote: ↑Sun Nov 17, 2024 4:49 pm
In general, it is not possible to prove the absolute consistency of a theory T. Instead we usually take a theory S, believed to be consistent, and try to prove the weaker statement that if S is consistent then T must also be consistent—if we can do this we say that T is consistent relative to S. If S is also consistent relative to T then we say that S and T are equiconsistent.
Yeah... you working on the premise that the absence of evidence for inconsistency is as good as consistency.
That's a non-seqitur.