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Exercises and Puzzles

I'm still doing exercises for the logic book. This is rather unpleasant because I have to use Microsoft Word. Getting back to Word after using reasonable document formats (like LaTeX) and editors (like Alpha) for a while is a very frustrating experience.

At the moment, I'm trying to find nice and simple versions of Gödel's Theorems that still leave something formal to prove (like deducing Löb's Theorem from provability properties). This turns out to be difficult because I don't have the space to introduce the concepts of representability and recursiveness.

Stealing Ideas (and a very difficult logic puzzle)

First, the puzzle:

In a certain country there are two Gods, called A and B. One of them (A or B, you don't know which) only tells the truth, the other one only falsehoods. One day you meet a God in this country and want to find out whether it's A or B. You're only allowed to ask a single yes/no question. Unfortunately, you don't understand the language of the Gods (even though they understand yours). All you know is that their words for "yes" and "no" are "qwer" and "poiu", but you don't know which of these means "yes", and which "no". With what question will you be able to find out whether it's A or B you're talking to?

I can't really say that I have made up this puzzle. Well, I have made it up, but I took all the main ingredients from puzzles by George Boolos, who himself owes them mainly to Raymond Smullyan and a computer scientist whose name I forgot.

Don't use Beta-Blogger or Diffbot

My logfiles show that an alarming number of people (namely more than 10 per day) look at my blogger and diffbot scripts. Don't do that. Don't use them. I have almost finished programming much better versions of both that might be worth trying. But since they have been in the "almost finished" state for quite some time now, I thought I'd better add this note here.

The Plastic Plan

Apologies in advance for another somewhat political entry.

Given the current state of everything, there is little hope that the easily available oil reserves won't be exploited until they are eshausted. There is also little hope that anything like the Kyoto protocol will prevent this from happening rather soon. For well-known reasons this is not good at all. So maybe those governments and institutions that care about the environment should try a different strategy: We could move forward with the exploitation of oil reserves, but instead of burning the oil and blowing all the carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, it could be bound in plastic.

Victory

On a more positive note, Prof. Beckermann found my speculations convincing: The next edition of his logic book won't contain "incorrect" quantifier rules any more.

War

I can't count how often I wished to live in that very close possible world in which Al Gore won the presidency (very close in terms of Lewis' similarity standards for counterfactuals, not in terms of overall similarity, sadly).

What worries me most is how many US Americans seem to back the Bush administration. I mean, when Clinton, like so many other people, had an extramarital affair and lied about it, that was a big scandal and caused an impeachment process. When Bush, quite unlike most people, violates the UN charta by going to war against a country that doesn't threaten the US at all, and keeps lying about his alleged knowledge of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction and links with Al Quaeda, Americans just seem to buy it. Then again, they are renaming French fries. There goes my princple of charity... For now, I blame it all on the absence of a free press in the US, but I'm not sure if that's a sufficient reason. I also tried to read blogs of the war-mongers, but that didn't help much, it just left me very depressed for the rest of the day. It's like shopping at Kottbusser Tor.

Oh well, I should better be blogging about quantifier rules in axiomatic systems of predicate logic.

Speculations on the Origin of "Incorrect" Quantifier Rules

The fact that it turned out so difficult to explain my question in sci.logic made me have a closer look at common axiomatic systems of the kind I was critizising. This was a good idea, because I found out that the systems used by Mendelson and Hodges are not of that kind after all. The only such system is the one used by Kutschera and Breitkopf, and as their logic book is German (and post-war), it is not surprising that nobody understood my problem. It is however interesting to compare the Kutschera/Breitkopf system with the systems of Mendelson, Hodges and others:

On Being Incomprehensible

Posting to newsgroups has some clear advantages over lonesome blogging. Most notably, when I write something incomprehensible in a newsgroup, somebody will tell me that I do. Whereas here in this blog, nobody ever complains even when I post absolutely unintelligible gibberish. Maybe adding a comments section would help. But then I don't really have a lot of readers. Maybe I should just add an "incomprehensible" button under each entry, which when pressed would send me an email asking for clarification.

Why use incorrect rules of inference?

Call for logicians: I have to convince Prof. Beckermann to drop an incorrect rule of inference from the axiomatic system for predicate logic used in his logic book. The incorrect rule is that from

A to B

one may derive

A to forall x B(t/x)

provided that t does not occur in A.

Bashing "Two Dogmas"

Christian has to write an introductory paper on Quine's "Two Dogmas". I wouldn't like to do this. I think "Two Dogmas" is excessively overrated, and should only be read in courses on the history of American philosophy. Unfortunately, Christian seems to agree with most of my misgivings. Maybe I find some opposition here.

"Two Dogmas" consists of three parts: §§1-4, §5 and §6. In §§1-4 Quine argues that there is no distinction to be drawn between analytic and synthetic statements. His argument appears to be as follows:

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