Path: ...!weretis.net!feeder9.news.weretis.net!i2pn.org!i2pn2.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail From: Richard Damon Newsgroups: comp.theory,sci.logic Subject: Re: Truthmaker Maximalism and undecidable decision problems --- the way truth really works Date: Wed, 12 Jun 2024 19:55:16 -0400 Organization: i2pn2 (i2pn.org) Message-ID: References: MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8; format=flowed Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Injection-Date: Wed, 12 Jun 2024 23:55:17 -0000 (UTC) Injection-Info: i2pn2.org; logging-data="4009708"; mail-complaints-to="usenet@i2pn2.org"; posting-account="diqKR1lalukngNWEqoq9/uFtbkm5U+w3w6FQ0yesrXg"; User-Agent: Mozilla Thunderbird X-Spam-Checker-Version: SpamAssassin 4.0.0 In-Reply-To: Content-Language: en-US Bytes: 7516 Lines: 177 On 6/12/24 9:05 AM, olcott wrote: > On 6/12/2024 6:33 AM, Richard Damon wrote: >> On 6/11/24 11:17 PM, olcott wrote: >>> On 6/11/2024 9:37 PM, Richard Damon wrote: >>>> On 6/11/24 9:57 PM, olcott wrote: >>>>> On 6/11/2024 8:44 PM, Richard Damon wrote: >>>>>> On 6/11/24 12:06 PM, olcott wrote: >>>>>>> On 6/11/2024 2:45 AM, Mikko wrote: >>>>>>>> On 2024-06-10 14:43:34 +0000, olcott said: >>>>>>>> >>>>>>>> Those laws do not constrain formal systems. Each formal system >>>>>>>> specifies >>>>>>>> its own laws, which include all or some or none of those. >>>>>>>> Besides, a the >>>>>>>> word "proposition" need not be and often is not used in the >>>>>>>> specification >>>>>>>> of a formal system. >>>>>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> *This is the way that truth actually works* >>>>>>> *People are free to disagree and simply be wrong* >>>>>> >>>>>> Nope, YOU are simply wrong, because you don't understand how big >>>>>> logic actualy is, because, it seems, your mind is to small. >>>>>> >>>>> >>>>> Every expression of language X that is >>>>> {true on the basis of its meaning} >>>>> algorithmically requires a possibly infinite sequence of >>>>> finite string transformation rules from its meaning to X. >>>> >>>> Unless it is just true as its nature. >>>> >>> >>> Which Mendelson would encode as: ⊢𝒞 >>> A {cat} {animal}. >> >> So, what is that statements truth-maker? >> >> And the truth-maker of that? >> >> You need a set of "first truth-makers" that do not themselves have >> something more fundamental at their truth-makers. > > I have always had that and told you about it dozens of times. > Some otherwise meaningless finite strings are stipulated to be > true thus providing these finite strings with meaning. > https://liarparadox.org/Meaning_Postulates_Rudolf_Carnap_1952.pdf > Bachelor(x) ~Married(x) But that doesn't fit your defintion of a Truth having a truth maker. > > If there really is nothing anywhere that makes expression > of language X true then X is untrue. > > This covers every truth that can possibly exist, true by > definition, true by entailment, true by observation, true > by an infinite sequence of truth preserving operations. > If nothing makes X true then X is untrue. So a "true by definition" or "stipulated truth" needs a truth maker. What makes that definition or stuplation "true", what is its truth-maker? > >>> >>>>> >>>>>>> >>>>>>> When we ask the question: What is a truthmaker? The generic >>>>>>> answer is >>>>>>> whatever makes an expression of language true its truthmaker. >>>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> But logic systems don't necessaily deal with "expressions of >>>>>> language" in the sense you seem to be thinking of it. >>>>>> >>>>> >>>>> Finite strings are the most generic form of "expressions of language" >>>> >>>> And not all things are finite strings. >>>> >>> >>> Every expression of language that is {true on the basis of its meaning} >>> is a finite string that is connected to the expressions of language that >>> express its meaning. >> >> And that just gets you into circles, > > A tree of knowledge has no cycles. Willard Van Orman Quine > was too stupid to see this. > https://www.ditext.com/quine/quine.html And then what is at is root? Show me a word that can be "defined" without using any other words. > >> as the expression of language that expresses its meaning needs a >> truth-maker too, and that need one for it, and so one. >> > > Some expressions of language are stipulated to be true > thus giving them meaning. Rudolf Carnap may have been > the first to formalize this with his meaning Postulates. But what gives the meaning to the stipulation? A stipulation is just a piece of language, what gives it meaning other than the words it uses, which need definitions. > > https://liarparadox.org/Meaning_Postulates_Rudolf_Carnap_1952.pdf > Bachelor(x) ~Married(x) > >> You need a primative base that is accepted without proof, as there is >> nothing to prove it, and that base defines the logic system you are >> going to work in. >> >>> >>>>> >>>>>>> This entails that if there is nothing in the universe that makes >>>>>>> expression X true then X lacks a truthmaker and is untrue. >>>>>> >>>>>> Unless it just is true because it is a truthmaker by definition. >>>>>> >>>>> >>>>> That is more than nothing in the universe. >>>>> >>>> >>>> but what makes the definition "true"? What is its truth-maker? >>>> >>>> Not everything has a truth-maker, because it might be a truth-maker >>>> itself. >>> >>> Basic facts are stipulated to be true. >>> "A cat is an animal" is the same basic fact expressed >>> in every human language and their mathematically >>> formalized versions. >>> >> >> So, basic facts do not have a truth-maker in their universe. > > True by definition is their truthmaker. Not by your definition. > >> >> But "A cat is an animal" is NOT a statement that is true in every >> system, as some systems might not HAVE a concept of "cat" in it at >> all, so that would be a non-sense expression, or might even define it >> to be something else. >> > > *That has already been covered by this* > When we ask the question: What is a truthmaker? The generic answer is > whatever makes an expression of language true its truthmaker. > > This entails that if there is nothing in the universe that makes > expression X true then X lacks a truthmaker and is untrue. But what them makes the truthmaker true? You said there were no cycles. > >> YOu still keep on running into the problem that youu mind clearly >> doesn't understand that expresability of logic, and you are stuck just >> not understanding how abstractions work. > > Not at all. The problem is that you have not yet paid ========== REMAINDER OF ARTICLE TRUNCATED ==========