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by denotational
1078 days ago
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UPDATE: since first writing this comment, I’ve checked four quasi-randomly selected books from my shelves (Leary and Kristiansen Introduction to Mathematical Logic, Hodges Model Theory, Manzano Model Theory, Avigad Mathematical Logic and Computation), and they all use valid/validity rather than true/truth to describe formulae that are true in all models, as I originally pointed out below. To be clear, I’m not at all trying to score points by appealing to the literature, but I think it’s really important to clarify that your definition isn’t standard because it will confuse people; I myself was confused by this exact point when I studied logic having previously read the “true but unprovable” description of Gödel 1. > A statement is true by definition if and only if it is satisfied in every model. I don’t think this is a standard definition. Every treatment I’ve seen refers to truth with respect to a model; if no model is specified, it is assumed to be obvious from context. Outside of formal treatments (i.e. in the setting where the 99% of mathematicians who aren’t logicians do their work), the model is the standard model. First-order formulae that are true in every model are validities. |
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Well, I suppose it depends on your definition of standard. That's how I have been taught logic. I also believe it is the historical notion. Honestly, "true but unprovable" sounds like a bad way to explain undecidability to me. Would you have been confused by "neither provable nor disprovable" instead? Also, this introduces a bias: the axiom of choice is neither provable nor disprovable in ZF. Are you going to say it is "true but unprovable" or "false but unprovable"?
> Every treatment I’ve seen refers to truth with respect to a model
That's called satisfiability.
> Outside of formal treatments (i.e. in the setting where the 99% of mathematicians who aren’t logicians do their work), the model is the standard model.
I simply cannot agree to that. What exactly is supposed to be the standard model of ZFC? For most mathematicians, what is true is what has been proved.