I’m pulling the “twitter is a microblog” rule even though twitter is pretty mega now, hope that’s ok.

  • SkaveRat@discuss.tchncs.de
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    8 days ago

    What Turing and Gödel independently proved is that a human observer can (theoretically) always have insights about mathematics and programming that are incomputable. That is, you cannot program or axiomatize or formalize or digitize everything that a mind can do. Period.

    that is not what either of them proved. like… at all

    • yeahiknow3@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      6 days ago

      You will find what I said in any philosophy of mathematics textbook dealing with the subject. In fact, I am paraphrasing the Oxford logician Joel David Hamkins.

      You’re welcome to also read Shapiro’s famous paper for a rephrasing. These results have been well understood for half a century, although because the implications are ultimately metaphysical and not mathematical, we can’t be sure of the wider consequences, if any.

      • SkaveRat@discuss.tchncs.de
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        8 days ago

        ah, now we’re getting somewhere.

        Going through some of the related paper abstracts, including speculative comments by Gödel: this is pure philosophy. Nothing that is set in stone. Which now points me back to my initial statement, where we can discuss all we want, but in the end it’s philosophy. Not “hard” (“provable”) science

        • yeahiknow3@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          8 days ago

          Here is what we know for sure:

          There can be no enumerable list of axioms for the true statements of mathematics. No computational procedure could exist to determine whether propositions are valid, provable, or even equivalent. And no matter how you formulate the number-theoretic axioms, a mathematician would always have insights (for instance, about whether a Diophantine equation has a solution) that are both clearly “true” and obviously unprovable. This holds true for all digital systems.

          Here is what we don’t know for sure:

          The metaphysical implications.

          Your distinction between science and philosophy is incorrect. Science is inductive and abductive. It can’t “prove” things. It’s not deductive. Mathematics and philosophy can prove things.

          Philosophy also determines the formal systems we use as a basis of reasoning, for instance, in science.

          • SkaveRat@discuss.tchncs.de
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            8 days ago

            Mathematics and logic

            agreed

            and philosophy

            and here I disagree

            Edit: aww, baby doesn’t like the philosophy of being disagreed with and blocked me. Should probably go back to kindergarten instead of college

            • yeahiknow3@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              8 days ago

              Yes, of course you can prove things in philosophy. Have you ever heard of syllogistic reasoning? The basis of… you know… proofs?

              All science is philosophy. Hence the P in PhD. Not all philosophy is science. Hope that helps.