Calculus Crusader wrote:JAK wrote:Gadianton, you’re either dishonest or stupid.
JAK
This is what we book learnin' folks call a false dichotomy.
I thought of that today, he could be both.
Calculus Crusader wrote:JAK wrote:Gadianton, you’re either dishonest or stupid.
JAK
This is what we book learnin' folks call a false dichotomy.
Tarski wrote:With regard to Godel's ontological argument (apparently an attempted clarification of an argument of Leibniz), it is indeed important to realize that the conclusion of such an argument can have no more certainty or clarity than the axioms. Valid logical argumentation about finite sets and about the integers carries force in part because of the clarity and plausibility of the axioms (and our experience in the real world!).
But what if one gets overly ambitious and sets up axioms which rational people disagree about with respect to plausibility and clarity? What do we make of the fact that the axioms have not been part of a long fruitful tradition as has been the Frankel-Zermelo axioms? Without clarity, and without a consistency proof, we are left with little but the speculations and logical toying about of a brilliant man who also indulged in many other mystical and metaphysical speculations. It seems clear that Godel did not think his argument was decisive or clear in the same way that his mathematical work was clear and decisive. It seems to me that he was going out on a speculative limb like we all do late at night after a few drinks (or bong hits?). He was just doing it in the way one would expect of a person train like Godel---in his language.
Notice also that one can consider valid an existential argument such as that given to show the existence of nowhere differentiable continuous functions and yet at the same time question the "reality" of the real numbers!! So it seems that an existence proof in an axiomatic system only establishes existence relative to that system. So it seems that we can be left wondering whether God is "real" even if we accept the formal validity of Godel's ontological argument.
So then what do I mean by real? Well, that is a problem, but not if one wants to talk about a Christian God who can directly interfere with the flow of history. Such a God is a force felt in the physical universe. Surely such a God's reality is empirical since he/she is a being that affects the material and human world.
Does anyone here think that if we can doubt the reality of the real number system that nevertheless Godel has proved that God is real?
Now, I although I am a mathematician, I am not a logician as such, and so there are many subtle points I expect to miss in this area (especially with regard to modal logic) but it doesn't take much research to find out that
1. Even Godel didn't think his argument proved the "existence" of God beyond doubt.
2. Godel's notion of God would be totally unlike the Biblical God and at best more like Plato's "The Good".
and
3. logicians do have big problem's with Godel's argument for God even on it's own terms:
see the section "Critique of definitions and axioms" in the Wiki article
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G%C3%B6del's_ontological_proof
Tarski wrote: So then what do I mean by real? Well, that is a problem, but not if one wants to talk about a Christian God who can directly interfere with the flow of history. Such a God is a force felt in the physical universe. Surely such a God's reality is empirical since he/she is a being that affects the material and human world.
Calculus Crusader wrote:Are you the guy who is into differential geometry and stuff like that?
Tarski wrote:Calculus Crusader wrote:Are you the guy who is into differential geometry and stuff like that?
I hope you aren't trying to pursue my in real life identity.
Anyway, I think I have already said on these boards that I have done most of my published research in differential geometry.
This semester though, I am going to do a graduate seminar series on quantum physics.
Why do you ask?
marg wrote:Tarski, I won't copy all your post, but you are a voice of reason. Gad, take note, he makes an argument, it makes sense!Tarski wrote: So then what do I mean by real? Well, that is a problem, but not if one wants to talk about a Christian God who can directly interfere with the flow of history. Such a God is a force felt in the physical universe. Surely such a God's reality is empirical since he/she is a being that affects the material and human world.
I've been using the word "actual" God. In otherwords the reality of the God may not be known however it exists as an actuality which potentially could be known scientifically in the future.
Gad wrote:I don't have any problem with what Tarski wrote.
In fact, I've tried multiple times to point out Godel's first commitment was platonism.
If I wanted your respect marg, or for you to eat out of my hand, all I'd have to do is register a new user and then argue the atheist side.
All either you gor JAK had to do was spend an hour or two carefully reading the wiki entry, you don't have to be a mathemetician like Tarski. But noo. You're both so full of yourselves that you think your common-sense thinking will take down of Godel's stature without either of you previously having any training or even having read a book on logic.
If you and your online remedial learning professor want to call all arguments tautologies because all arguments rest on tautologies, then you're making the same point Pahoran makes when he argues that all knowledge is circular and therefore no argument is ultimately better than any other argument. You'll never find a text on formal logic that labels a deductive argument a tautology unless its conclusion restates a premise. And even if we take your view, and the online professor's view, that doesn't salvage JAK's ridiculous accusation since every argument ever made is a tautology.
I didn't enter this discussion with an interest in what the best arguments for and against Godel (or anyone else on any other thread) are. That doesn't depend on you and JAK or myself. I was interested in the zeal JAK whipped his horse into battle on a topic clearly beyond his grasp. And while Christianity bugs me, ignorant atheism bugs me more.