FOM: Intuitionism
William Tait
wwtx at midway.uchicago.edu
Thu May 23 16:08:13 EDT 2002
In an earlier posting, I pointed out that, if an intuitionist were to
treat ``P is provable'' as a mathematical proposition, then there would
be no choice but to take it to be the same as or equivalent to P [and,
in that case "either p is provable, not-p is provable, or neither is
provable" reduces to excluded middle]. For, what would prove ``P is
provable'' other than a proof of P. Here there is no appeal to anyone's
authority: it only has to be agreed that, for an intuitionist, a
proposition is given precisely when it is specified what counts as a
proof of it.
Jesper Carlson introduces the legitimate consideration that ``P is
provable'' should not be taken to be a mathematical proposition---in
which case, the original question of whether intuitionists would accept
the statment "either p is provable, not-p is provable, or neither is
provable" as logically valid is ill-posed.
His report that Martin-Lof does not take ``P is provable'' to be a
mathematical proposition would seem irrelevant to a discussion of
foundations---though a report of M-L's argument might well be relevant.
Bill Tait
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