On Oct 14, 8:06 pm, Graham Cooper <
grahamcoop...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I quoted the whole paragraph and you ignored it!
I DIDN'T ignore it! I read and then ASKED WHY you were going on about
differences between Hilbert
and natural-deduction systems! THAT DOESN'T *MATTER*!!
> You said WHY QUOTE THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN
> NATURAL AND HILBERT SYSTEMS?
>
> so I quoted the part with ... IT HAS LOGIC AXIOMS.
No, you did NOT do that -- you MISquoted something saying a deductive
system was a list of formulas.
>
> LOGIC AXIOMS! THE TOPIC FOR 2 WEEKS.
>
> the fact I made it look like a LIST OF LIST OF FORMULA
> instead of a LIST OF FORMULA
>
> is a typo!
No, it ISN'T a typo -- it's QUOTED FROM THE ARTICLE so it CAN'T be a
typo!
You just quoted it WRONG! And then BELIEVED your own wrong misquote!
Herc: just becomes somebody SAID something "has logical axioms" DOES
NOT MEAN
it has them! *I* say it DOESN'T have them and *I* am the one
teaching this course!
ANY logical axiom can BE REPLACED by a rule of inference that simply
infers/produces THE SAME result!
That sort of means that there IS NO POINT IN ANYBODY EVER having
logical axioms! The people who SAY
they have them DON'T NEED THEM. *YOU*ESPECIALLY* don't need them
since YOU ARE NOT SMART ENOUGH TO TELL THE DIFFERENCE
between "a logical axiom" and an axiom (a REAL axiom, an axiom being
used FOR THE RIGHT purpose, for the purpose that axioms ARE FOR,
namely, to serve AS THE BASE upon which to construct the theorems, as
the first things FROM WHICH the inference rules can be used to infer
THEOREMS) IN THE *OBJECT* theory!
> You are a LONG WAY from PROVING
>
> ~E(r) xer <-> ~xex
>
> with INFERENCE RULES.
Dipshit, I HAVE ALREADY POSTED this proof!
You can infer
~( rer <--> ~rer ) FROM NOTHING (at 1st-order), BECAUSE IT IS A
*ZERO*TH-Order TAUTOLOGY!
If you really want to "prove" that then you can prove it just by
COMPUTING ITS TRUTH-TABLE!
That suffices FOR ALL tautologies!
Once you have that, THERE REALLY IS AN INFERENCE RULE called
"existential generalization" that you can use to generalize 3 of the 4
r's to get
Ex[ ~( xer <--> ~xex ) ]
>
> FOR 1 THING - THERE IS A VARIABLE INSTANTIATION
And for another thing, THERE ARE INFERENCE RULES both for introducing
and eliminating quantifiers and variables, both existential and
universal, in first-order logic, DUMBASS. YOU EVEN QUOTED A TABLE of
them, SO YOU ALLEGE.
> Stop writing novels about OBJECT LANGUAGE CRAP!
Idiot, ANYTHING WITH "e" in it IS IN the object language!
The object language IS RELEVANT! I do NOT MEAN "object language" in
the COMPILER sense!
You are so ignorant about logic that you didn't even know that that
term had another meaning!
> What you are saying takes 1 line!
*I* am the one who TOLD YOU that it only takes one line to infer
~( rer <--> ~rer ) !! To raise that to FIRST-order DOES take SEVERAL
lines!
> -> is logical implication
> --> is implied theorem addition to the physical theory.
SEZ YOU. If you think anybody is going to adopt your notation in this
context, you have another thing coming.
Those symbols look too much alike, and the first one is just too small
to be legible.
IN REAL LIFE, logical/material implication is going to look like -->,
and an inference rule,
something that allows you to add a new theorem to things you've
already derived, is going to look like
(old theorem1 as input)
(old theorem2 as input)
==================
(new theorem as output).
That's right, it's going to be written WITH A HORIZONTAL LINE
SEPARATING the premises from the inferred conclusion.
WHICH YOU WOULD KNOW ALREADY IF YOU HAD BOTHERED TO READ what you were
quoting!
There IS NO "physical theory".
WHY DON'T YOU READ the wikpedia article on first-order logic instead
of falsely assuming that it might say something that might help you
win this argument?
There IS NO argument! It TAKES TWO to argue! You ARE NOT one of the
two becuase YOU DON'T KNOW anything!