cyborg
deus ex machina
- Joined
- Aug 12, 2005
- Messages
- 4,981
Scarcely.
What does it fail to capture?
What is incompleteness if not asking meaningless symbols to be meaningful and then asking them what their meaning is?
Scarcely.
Proof of logic....well, here's my take on it:
In the end, logic and math are pseudosciences. Very good ones, but still pseudosciences, because they base all of their claims on intuition. Now, they don't have to. They could (and probably will in future) derive the rules, etc. from human psychology or some similar source. Math and logic are needed to do this, however, so for now we have to stick with intuitive rules (which happen to be quite good and quite complex).
I don't regard math or logic as sciences at all, let alone 'pseudosciences'.
I've addressed this in earlier threads and won't rehash it here.
Math is the study of consequences. The axioms that are posited do not need to have any consistency with reality as we know it - the only requirement is that they be consistent as a set of axioms.
Drop the term 'pseudosciences' - it adds nothing to the discussion, and is likely to be misunderstood as woo.
What does it fail to capture?
What is incompleteness if not asking meaningless symbols to be meaningful and then asking them what their meaning is?
This shocked the hell out of mathematicians.
I hope that this made some sense. I left out a lot and probably screwed something up.
I don't think so.
Godel was about the impossibility of a system of logic that is inclusive of all truth.
Jetlag is asking about the actual rules of logic, or how you get from premises to conclusions.
Not that I understand why he asks such a question.
BJ
Meaning is given to a theory through an interpretation. Many interpretations are usually possible.
At most levels of mathematics, mathematicians work with some interpretation (usually a common interpretation) in mind.
I have no idea what, if any, interpretation might be valid for your strings of symbols. You have provided no grammar.
I disagree with you about formal systems, of course.
Um, no he's not. You may not be aware of his earlier posts in other threads. I was trying to help him out. Godel is what he is really asking about. He is trying to find room for God. Godel thought he had (or, at least room for the Platonic Forms).
He is really asking about the foundations and limitations of logic.
Yes.
If you knew anything about logic, you'd not need to frame such a question.
It's True!![]()
Um, no he's not. You may not be aware of his earlier posts in other threads. I was trying to help him out. Godel is what he is really asking about. He is trying to find room for God. Godel thought he had (or, at least room for the Platonic Forms).
He is really asking about the foundations and limitations of logic.
Skeptics aren't saying, "We proved there is no god!" What people are saying is, "At this time, we have found no evidence of god that doesn't have another, simpler, explanation. This could change when new evidence appears."
If you cannot prove logic, then how can you be so sure of it
that you disprove god with it?
Actually, I am much less sophisticated than that.
If you cannot prove logic, then how can you be so sure of it that you disprove god with it?
You're asking about two different types of certainty.
1) How can we be sure logic 'works' on a mechanical level? Because it's very simply constructable.
2) How can we be sure logic 'works' on an explicative level? Because we can make it reflect the world effectively.
You have to give 'god' meaning first, not ask us to remove meaning from it.
'god' is usually said to be mysterious, unknowable, beyond human abilities to understand, so one cannot really talk about his meaning I think.
'god' is more about attaching emotions to it, transcendent feelings, contemplations of the sacred, mystery and meaning of life...
Ok, please explain.