« first day (2323 days earlier)      last day (2997 days later) » 

23:07
Last night dream strongly reminds of a mix of the hydra game, cayley tables and social networks. Basically there's a process of unwrapping a statement of uncertain truth value.

Suppose there's a statement saying "Y is supported by the research of X". Then for every such statement, a table can be generated as follows:

1. Everytime the statement references itself or its previous selves, duplicate the statement once but no further for each self reference.
2. If the statement contains modal verbs, negation and any adjectives of some sort, make a new copy of the statement treating those aforme
Example: Using what the dream said, "This statement is false" will become:

This statement is false
This statement is true
Something something Yablo paradox
@Secret this statement is true. <- doesn't even make sense
One of the most hilarious thing is that if you take any pseudoscientific claim as the statement (which probably include a lot of antedotes, figures and stuff and misuse of quotes), at least as seen in the dream it always end up generating an irregular table of size > 10 x 20 something
(Typo: Forgot to type one more thing: For each rule: Whenever a statement is duplicated, the duplicated version no longer has the modifiers that cause it to duplicate in the first place, or it becomes a modifer that does not do not do anything (e.g. true)
so naively speaking it always terminates
@Null But this isn't the usual form of not making sense, usually not making sense is something along the lines of no roots, that statement is more like multiple roots in the domain of interest and so you can't know which sense to make of it.
It has two valid interpretations which lead to opposite conclusions :P
For example: "This is the number 3" gives the table:

This is the number 3
This is the number 2
This is the number 1
23:17
@TedShifrin here ?
So: "that is BECAUSE it is written here and there" is a very poor reasoning
Sorry typo:

This is the number 3 gives:

This is the number 3
This is the number 2
This is the number 2
This is the number 2
This is the number 1
This is the number 1
This is the number 1
This is the number 1
This is the number 1
This is the number 1
why nvm
Bounty hunters attention !! Placed a bounty here math.stackexchange.com/questions/1553888/…
Hope it Gets an answer
that looks hard
23:30
2
Q: Is saying 'This statement is true' a logically valid statement?

HoserI understand how 'This statement is false' is not logically valid, but what about 'This statement is true'? I've always heard self-referential statements are not logically sound, but I can't really give a great explanation for why this one would not be. Anyone have a good argument one way or the ...

This is so because it is so?
^how about this one
I think the outcome is logically equivalent to "This statement is true"
Because assume true, then $T\rightarrow T= T$
Assume it false, $F \rightarrow F = F$
I think it can be more compactly rephrased as "If X then X"
where X is the statement (in this case, X is the statement itself)
@mick this looks more like a number theory problem than anything else
Either this statement is false or you will eat your hat
are the residues of the integers equidistributed modulo $\pi$?
23:43
^ The only way for that not to be paradoxical is for you to eat your hat
@Sophie I believe they're dense
(Doesn't quite answer the question though)
This statement is either true or false.
That's true; no paradox. (If it's neither then it's false, so it's not neither.)
This statement is either true or false or a unicorn.
@Sophie yes, this is equivalent to asking whether $k/\pi$ is equidistrubted mod $\Bbb Z$, and that's true of any irrational in place of $1/\pi$
x \implies x is a true statement
@Null ^
23:47
^well, one of the first things we proved in our algebra course
@MikeMiller Why? I feel like it should be easy but I'm missing it
$\neg a\land a\implies$ hilarious
"Does Riemann conjecture imply Fermat's Last Theorem?"
No
23:49
@AkivaWeinberger I've long forgotten the proof; it's a special case of the ergodic theorem, which I also don't know how to prove
but it's an old theorem so there should be rather elegant and simple proofs
yes
@mick it should be yes
i found $\neg a\land a\implies$ indianers at a tipi with guns the funniest, who was it again who brought it up?
@Null if 1<0, then P=NP
Anything implies truth, and falsehood implies anything
nice
23:53
@mick Start by assuming the Riemann Hypothesis. Then mimick the 1995 proof of Fermat's Last Theorem. Conclude.
@AkivaWeinberger mmh
i wonder if the proof of FLT requires the existence of inaccessible cardinals
"If 1=0 then everyone is the pope"
well falsehood implies anything
@Null If you work in intuitionistic logic, however, you can get cool stuff, like how $p\lor\lnot p$ can't be assumed to be true
It keeps the "falsehood implies anything" thing though
update: nope, FLT does not require the existence of inaccessible cardinals, and is true just from ZFC
23:58
well, falsehood implies certainly truth
probably from peano arithmetic but you're going to have a tougher time claiming that they know that as a fact
but some true statements don't imply another true statement I suppose
(read i feel)
And also, intuitionistic logic includes classical logic (that is, "normal logic"), in a certain sense. Essentially, if you take any classically true statement and put a bunch of $\lnot\lnot$s everywhere, you get something that's true in intuitionistic logic
So in a certain sense intuitionistic logic is richer than classical logic

« first day (2323 days earlier)      last day (2997 days later) »