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Re: [lojban] Not talking about imaginary worlds
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On Monday 02 July 2001 11:40, Edward Cherlin wrote:
> We will have to do what the mathematicians do--Work out how to express
> ourselves clumsily in the current language, and then invent a better one
> when we have a better idea of what we are doing.
not being proficient enough in mathematics yet i do not fully grasp the depth
of the arguments brought forward here. however in spite of risking to restate
some of what was written, the following:
i imagine a hierachy of "universes", each of these is determined by the
propositions that are certain within them, and they contain a potentially
infinite number of propositions that are undecided. by determining an
undecided proposition a new universe is created which inherits all
certainties from its ancestor adding to them the proposition whose
affirmation created the new universe. all other uncertainties persist.
applied to discourse that means a speaker starts out with a universe
containing all propositions that are true form his perspective, whether all
those propositions are considered seperately for the sake of universe
creation or as one does not matter much. as long as the speaker does not
question what he holds to be true, corresponding to traversing the hierarchy
rootwards, we are not concerned with what lies "below" the universe
representing the speakers knowledge. the concept becomes feaseble once one
considers propositions that are not decided in the current universe, they
could be either true or false, bearing the potential for two new universes.
thus if the speaker wants to argue based on the tentative truth or falsity of
the proposition in question, he "enters" one of the universes and from then
on anything said will presume the proposition determined. he may of course
equally well leave the universe again and enter the opposite or create ones
within others, "recursively speculating" so to say.
in the terms of this concept the usual "if p is true then q is true" phrases
could be described as taking the undecided proposition p, entering the
universe where p is true, and then affirming q. this is equivalent to saying
"suppose p is true. q is true". the latter seems to be employed when the
consequence demands a longer description so the condition is syntactically
detached.
the root of the hierarchy could be imagined as being determined by a
proposition of the sort "i think therefore i am".
- --
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HARDFAIL("Not enough magic.");
2.4.0-test2 /usr/src/linux/drivers/block/nbd.c
pub 1024D/834F4976 2001-01-07 Björn Gohla (Wissenschaftler, Weltbürger)
<b.gohla@gmx.de>
Key fingerprint = 9FF4 FEDA CCDF DA0E 14D5 8129 6C14 3C39 834F 4976
sub 1024g/29571FE2 2001-01-07
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