|
|
|
|
|
by lmm
289 days ago
|
|
> Within the scope of mathematical logic, there’s a counterexample with Gödel’s first incompleteness theorem, which says that any theory sufficiently strong enough to model arithmetic contains a true sentence that’s not provable, called a Gödel sentence for the theory. The Gödel sentence is verifiable by its construction; however, it’s not provable from below. I don't think this is a valid counterexample. The Gödel sentence is only verifiable from outside the theory, and you can prove it from outside the theory in the same way (e.g. with a large cardinal assumption for ZFC). |
|
Thanks for pointing this out! I'll update the post.
I'm now not sure what's the distinction between verifiability and discoverability among truths in a formal system.