[FOM] Re: The rule of generalization in FOL, and pseudo-theorems
Kai Brünnler
kai.bruennler at gmx.net
Thu Sep 2 08:52:10 EDT 2004
Dear Marcin,
You wrote:
> Kai Bruennler writes "After checking with some of my colleagues here in
> Bern it seems to me that "working logicians" do not share your concern
> about calling formulas with free variables "theorems". Are you aware of any
> technical (as opposed to philosophical) problems arising from that?"
>
> I do not know what Kai Bruennler means by "philosophical problems".
I was just referring to the problem that Sandy Hodges outlined:
> I would say that "0
> < a => (Exists y) a < y" is not a theorem - but even if we called it a
> theorem, the problem would not go away - we then have to deal with
> "theorems" which don't say anything, which are neither true nor false.
Further you wrote:
> [...] Nevertheless the
> problem shows that a kind of proof systems which you sell to others (not
> "working logicians") is essential and it is not only "philosophical"
> problem.
No doubt. However, I was referring to the more specific problem above,
which, btw, I didn't mean to belittle by calling it philosophical. My
question was a genuine one, so let me clarify. I have a deductive system
that works entirely on closed formulas and thus meets Sandy Hodges
criterion. I like this property of the system, but I do so purely for
aesthetical reasons. Are there other, more technical, reasons why this
property is desirable?
-Kai
http://www.iam.unibe.ch/~kai/
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