Title: Philosophy & math Post by: Bent-Winged Angel on December 02, 2010, 04:06:24 PM If there are degrees of infinity, as proven by Georg Cantor, a mathematician and father of Set Theory,would it not be unreasonable to thiink that for every thing one consides in his/her heart to be true contains at least one element of a falsehood?
Title: Re: Philosophy & math Post by: Sockratease on December 02, 2010, 06:24:36 PM If there are degrees of infinity, as proven by Georg Cantor, a mathematician and father of Set Theory,would it not be unreasonable to thiink that for every thing one consides in his/her heart to be true contains at least one element of a falsehood? In formal logic, "Truth" is undefined! It defies any attempt to define it, so I say truth itself is false... Title: Re: Philosophy & math Post by: hobold on December 02, 2010, 06:52:18 PM I don't know what the philosophers think, but modern mathematicians, until recently, used to think that "true" and "provable" were the same thing. Then came Kurt Gödel and proved his incompleteness theorem. Since then, "true" and "provable" are recognized as different things.
In my humble opinion, the concept of "truth" can only be defined from some kind of utilitarian point of view. "True" are all the claims that you can reliably base predictions of the future on. "False" are those claims that don't help you to reliably predict the future. This is why Newtonian physics was true in its day and age: there was no technology back then that exposed relativistic effects (nor could there have been such a technology, because no one had the know how). This is why there is a grey area of claims that may seem to help predicting the future, but later turn out to be mere correlations rather than underlying truths. I.e. things that are "almost always true". Philosophical and mathematical notions of truth would have evolved from there. So these days we are using the concept of truth for things that we cannot verify or falsify in the material world. The original utilitarian rule of thumb no longer helps us there. I guess "truth" is now mostly about consistency with the more mundane, verifiable truths. That drastically increases the likelihood that predictions of the real world, based purely on theory, will end up being correct in practice. Title: Re: Philosophy & math Post by: Sockratease on December 02, 2010, 11:16:43 PM The Statement Below Is True.
The Statement Above Is False. Title: Re: Philosophy & math Post by: Bent-Winged Angel on December 02, 2010, 11:42:51 PM The Statement Below Is True. The Statement Above Is False. THREAD KILLER! :fiery: Title: Re: Philosophy & math Post by: hobold on December 02, 2010, 11:51:32 PM Not a thread killer, just a contradiction. Gödel's thread killer would look more like:
"This statement cannot be proven". True or false? And what are the consequences in either case? Title: Re: Philosophy & math Post by: David Makin on December 03, 2010, 01:52:54 AM Not a thread killer, just a contradiction. Gödel's thread killer would look more like: "This statement cannot be proven". True or false? And what are the consequences in either case? One could just ask if either of these are true or false: 1. "This statement is true" or 2. "This statement is false" Obviously if the first is false then it is incorrect so it's false, but if the first is true then it is correct so it's true but if the second is true then it's incorrect so it's false but if it's false then it's correct so it's true :) "The meaning and purpose of life is to give life purpose and meaning" (My own AFAIK, but if anyone's seen it elsewhere I'd like to know) To me "Reality" or "existence" is essentially a manifestation of statement 2 ! I like this question: "I am, but is anything else ?". Another, with answers: "What is, but is not ?" Answer 1:"Everything", Answer 2:"Nothing" For those who want a deity, question to deity:"Why?" answer: "Because I could." or (better) "Why not?" Which is correct: "Nothing never exists" or "Nothing always exists" ? Title: Re: Philosophy & math Post by: David Makin on December 03, 2010, 02:08:25 AM If there are degrees of infinity, as proven by Georg Cantor, a mathematician and father of Set Theory,would it not be unreasonable to thiink that for every thing one consides in his/her heart to be true contains at least one element of a falsehood? In formal logic, "Truth" is undefined! It defies any attempt to define it, so I say truth itself is false... In philosophy relating to existence then the only "absolute truth" is "I think therefore I am", though I prefer "I think, therefore something is, part of which may be me". Title: Re: Philosophy & math Post by: jehovajah on December 03, 2010, 10:13:32 AM This is why Newtonian physics was true in its day and age: there was no technology back then that exposed relativistic effects (nor could there have been such a technology, because no one had the know how). This is why there is a grey area of claims that may seem to help predicting the future, but later turn out to be mere correlations rather than underlying truths. I.e. things that are "almost always true". Newton in fact understood relativity very well, he just did not see the significance of it to the speed of light and time in our modern sense. Newton was not alone in understanding relativity, as you can go back as far as the sumerians and Dravidians and Egyptians and find the concept. Surprisingly non of these topics are new to discussion, being regularly discussed in various cultures throughout history. Our contribution to the discussion has been technological and passionate. From the reformation the west really felt it could master nature and bend it to human will. Former cultures were more respectful and more in sync with their environment, calling each element or process a god and respecting it that way. Relativity really required Lorentz to take off in Einstein's mind, but the fundamentals of relativity were appreciated solely through proportion, and trigonometry and Quaternions. Thus it took another 100 or so years to make this obvious to modern scientists, but many scientists from Maxwell onwards had a good enough perception of it. Einstein was the one who captured the scientific imagination and brought it all together, contributing very little math i might add! It was his insight and praxis that were influential. We then have to go through Schroedinger and Dirac and Feynman to get to the modern understanding. Now they did contribute some math! As to truth, scratch that! Congruence, similarity and accuracy/ approximation are utilitarian cognates. Adhere,inhere and cohere are also important verbs to framework discussions. There are no Absolutes! And that is absolutely true! :rotfl: For the notion of moral relativism being a slippery slope, realise that all are hypocrites, and that takes care of that issue. :headbatting: Empiricists have worked through these issues since greek times and before. John Locke is the modern founder of the movement. There is nothing wrong with the old idea of "true" and nothing right with the old idea of "false", but this like any statement is to be taken with a pinch of salt. Logic, particularly propositional logic is only utilitarian not "the truth" as pointed out above. In fact i hold that "the truth" is one of the major lies we are told in our current culture! We may enjoy ourselves if we will accept that that is a great thing to do and an end in itself. Moral questions can then be seen as critiques to social mores as they indeed are. As a consequence of that mores are imperfect and prejudicial, unless we work to make them "fairer" in some way, and by some measure. :dink: Title: Re: Philosophy & math Post by: hobold on December 03, 2010, 11:31:42 AM Gödel's incompleteness theorem had to be about provability, not about truth. That's the only way he could show that those two are different. Let me bore you in more detail... :)
Remember: "this statement cannot be proven" was his target, formulated as rigorously as any other mathematical theorem. Case 1: There indeed exists no proof of the statement. That implies we have found a truth that cannot be reached by logical deduction from the foundations of mathematics (a proof is an unbroken chain of deduction that starts at a small number of axioms and arrives at the claim). That in turn implies that our system of logic is fundamentally incomplete. (Adding the statement as an axiom won't fix it, but that's another long story.) Case 2: There is a proof of the statement. That implies a contradiction can be constructed from a long chain correct reasoning, starting out at the foundations of mathematics. So our system of logic is fundamentally flawed, because it contradicts itself. In other words, Gödel was able to show that mathematics, logic itself, is buggy one way or another and cannot be fixed. Title: Re: Philosophy & math Post by: Melancholyman on April 06, 2011, 02:15:58 AM There is truth, truth is experience. Experience is not subject to judgement, I am of course talking about the experience itself. Experience is what it is and all the experience you have had and ever will have is true, it cannot be false. Then of course you could claim that it cannot be true either, only state that it IS. But what is must be, and if to be is not truth then there is no truth. Ehhr...This is precisely what Descartes meant with "I am a thinking thing", what he really meant in modern language is "I am experience"
Title: Re: Philosophy & math Post by: taurus on April 06, 2011, 01:35:38 PM ... Experience is not subject to judgement ... This is exactly the point. In other words you can say experience is irrelevant. Expierience is real, not true (and not false). Relevant are statements about expierience and they can be true, false or undecidable. Those undecidable statements are by the way the reason, why we have today an axiomatic set theory. Modern logic still (and maybe will ever) base one a few unproovable assumptions. A fact, that might be important for all sorts of philosophic considerations. greetz taurus Title: Re: Philosophy & math Post by: jehovajah on April 13, 2011, 03:06:01 AM It is near easter so like Pilate i pose the question: "what is truth?
For that matter what is experience? And finally what is logic? Wherever we start from it s only ever a starting place. Starting with experience is the best starting place, is my opinion. Title: Re: Philosophy & math Post by: visual.bermarte on April 13, 2011, 01:42:00 PM YES, you need experience for that! <--semantics
first order logic contains predicative logic and has a decidability's problem..propositional logic not. Problem of 'decidability' arises for propositional logic as well just because of time needed solving very long propositions/sentences! just depends on the method used... When talking about logic+quantifiers is better to talk about 'satisfaction' instead of 'truth' AND we need semantics (experience) for that task.. :) see>http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Propositional_calculus Title: Re: Philosophy & math Post by: Bent-Winged Angel on April 14, 2011, 11:21:35 PM analytic propositions are truth
for example 1. All triangles have three interior angles. 2. All bachelors are unmarried. 3. All whales are mammals. :tongue1: Title: Re: Philosophy & math Post by: jehovajah on May 10, 2011, 02:36:48 PM analytic propositions are truth for example 1. All triangles have three interior angles. 2. All bachelors are unmarried. 3. All whales are mammals. :tongue1: From your examples BWA i derive that tautologies are truth. From this i note that the experience of going around in a circle of reasoning is truth. From this is derive that experience is an important element of truth. Yet i do not see any referrent for truth beyond the experience of testing each description against an experience and feeling satisfied it is "correct", all experiences. Is truth experiences, then? :embarrass: |