[FOM] Truth theories and the conservativity argument
henri galinon
henri.galinon at libertysurf.fr
Mon Aug 28 09:26:06 EDT 2006
Dear fomers, in a previous post ( http://www.cs.nyu.edu/pipermail/fom/
2006-August/010741.html ) I've tried to sketch what a response to the
"conservativity argument" of Shapiro and Ketland may look like.
Thanks to conversations with R. Heck, I have somewhat clarified my idea.
I think the following way to look at things have some clarificatiry
power (I think for instance that it is a good basis to settle the
Tennant-Ketland battle, besides answering the Shapiro-Ketland
argument). Before starting, it 's important to remind us of
something : it makes sense to apply truth only to interpreted
language. So formal systems of arithmetic (for instance) we consider
when truth-theorizing should better be called formalized system
(rather than just "formal").
Now since we are speaking of formalized system, the question of the
adequation of the system to its informal counterpart arises (this is
not the case in formal system, stricto sensu, like group theory and
the like, since for these later attributing truth simply makes no
sense, as one may easily concvince himself).
So a concept linking the informal theory we have of a domain (the
basic understanding we have of our subject) and its formal
counterparts may be useful. I propose to use "faithfulness" (for
lack of a better term), as briefly suggested in my first fom-post.
The general question was, remember, wether non-conservativity results
of some faithful truth-theory over PA show anything concerning the
"substantiality" of our ordinary concept of truth or, to put it
another way, wether the truth predicate has any explanatory power.
This being said, let me try to convince you that the conservativity
argument is flawed.
-My main hypothesis is this, I believe :
anybody grasping the natural numbers knows that the omega-rule is
valid. (it is just trivial logical principle applied to an infinite
set). *It is known that it is truth-preserving*. I think this can be
justified with some great plausibility.
- PA minus induction plus w-rule, that is "faithful arithmetic" as
I'll call it, is complete.
- On the other hand, we may see the point of constructing formal
systems as a mean to discover (that is to prove) some new truths from
truths we already know about the domain under consideration (natural
number, say). We achieve this by writing down axioms we know to be
true and *applying* logical rules known to be truth-preserving (sorry
for the platitudes). Of course, infinitary-rules, even known to be
valid, are of no use in there. Only finitary rules can be used by us
(finite being). Let me nonetheless insist on a point. It may be
useful to contrast two kinds of inferences then : on the one hand
those which are finitary, realy rule-like we may say, call them (for
lack of a better term) discovery-rules. They are the useful rules to
prove new things from old things, to learn more. On the other hand we
have so called infinitary-rules, which have as essential feature
that they can be described but not applied. Whatever the importance
of the difference may be between the two, it is important to
recognize that both kind of rules may be valid (that is: truth-
preserving), and *moreover known to be valid*. And basically, the w-
inference is known to valid by someone who knows what natural numbers
are.
-We may at first hope that it is possible to get (write down) all we
know of the numbers in a finitary-rule setting (with r.e. set of
axioms). But incompletness shows us precisely that this won't do. I
take it, with many others I suppose, that this is the fundamental
significance of the theorems (I don't think any "metaphysical" thesis
can be extracted from them. We are no better than the machines : we
can deal with infinity only under descriptions, names etc., as is
clear too from the beginning of the discussion )
- Thus we have to work in formal systems which only approximate
faithful arithmetic. Systems like PRA might be sufficient to work out
some theorems, but often we need more and are looking for stronger
system which better approximate faithful arithmetic. And of course
the strenghtening of approximations will often be done by some kind
of formalization of the omega-rule since we know it to be valid (and
in fact since it belongs to our very understanding of what numbers
are). Induction axioms can be seen as one way to do this, reflection
principles as others, formalized omega-rules, combination of them, etc .
We can also try what I here will take to be some kind of semantic
ascent, by introducing talk about sets of natural numbers and axioms
for them etc. All this are basically justified by our knowledge of
the omega-rule to be valid.
But now, when using this tools to discover new theorems, what is
basically explanatory ? The real explanatory work, it is plain now,
is done by the w-rule, by our knowledge of this rule to be valid, or
again our basic understanding of the natural numbers.
*The other tools (induction, sets, etc.) basically adress an
*expression* problem *: the problem to put (express) in a formal
(that is finite) setting our knowledge of the structure of the
natural numbers.
Among these tools, we can also introduce a truth-predicate, of course.
But the non-conservativity result of T(PA) over PA does not show
that truth is substantial, or does any real explanatory work (truth-
talk is not like "electron" talk in physics, this is plain. I don't
want to insist on this here) : on the contrary, we may (should, I
think) see the results concerning the respective strength of various
truth-predicate (intertranslatability of T(PA) and ACA or RA for
instance) as measurments of the *expressive* strength of the various
predicates. But this is basically what the deflationist says : that
truth is an expressive device ! (the "minimal" theories do not fulfil
their purpose in this respect, at least in "typed"-truth framework.
But note, a contrario, that the "minimal" theory of truth, when
implemented in faithful arithmetics, in turn gives all the basic
truth-theoretic principles).
-We may agree that conservativeness, in general, is a good measurment
tool for relative substantiality (and for what is at issue, it may
well be a good tool to show the substantiality of having concepts for
dealing with the infinite, or potentiality). But that faithful
theories of truth (that is : proving coherence and the like of the
base theory, say) are non-conservative over non-faithful arithmetic
(formal systems) does not shows anything concerning the
substantiality of the concept of truth. On the other hand, truth-
theories are, of course, for trivial reasons, conservative over
faithful arithmetic (since this last is complete). Still, truth-like
concept (set-theoretic concepts, semantic concepts etc) are of course
indispensable, for we have seen that for the point of discovering new
truths, there is a basic trade-off beetween faithful and useful
theories (at least as long as we're interested in studying domain
having as much "structure" as the natural numbers).
Then in a nutshell the response to the conservativity argument is
this : the conservativity argument would show truth to be
"substantial" only if we didn't knew the omega-rule to be valid. And
our knowledge of the validity of the w-rule has nothing to do with
our grasp of the concept of truth, but with our grasp of the
structure of the natural numbers.
As a concluding remark, I should note that it in quite another
form, my argument is essentially the same as the one Field has
developped in his own response to Shapiro (I 've realized this late).
(approximate reference of Field's paper : Journal of Philosophy, 1999).
I don't know what you'll think about this, but if you have a
moment, I would be interested in hearing from you on this line of
thought. Isn't it to simple to be true ?
Is this related to Carnap's work ? (a friend of mine suggested it
might be)
Henri Galinon
NB: As Neil Tennant would put it, I'm not a deflationist, but ...
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