Main Page | Report this Page
 
   
Science Forum Index  »  Logic Forum  »  a paradox in ZF?? ... ...
Page 1 of 2    Goto page 1, 2  Next
Author Message
giovanni lagnese
Posted: Sat Jan 10, 2004 6:37 pm
Guest
the smallest non-definable ordinal is definable.
why is this argument wrong?
William Elliot
Posted: Sat Jan 10, 2004 10:00 pm
Guest
On Sat, 10 Jan 2004, giovanni lagnese wrote:

If there is a non-definable ordinal, then

Quote:
the smallest non-definable ordinal is definable.

which is a contradiction. Therefore....

Quote:
why is this argument wrong?

It isn't. You didn't include the complete argument.
Charlie-Boo
Posted: Sat Jan 10, 2004 10:03 pm
Guest
"giovanni lagnese" <ti.oiligriv@rotnac_groeg> wrote
Quote:
the smallest non-definable ordinal is definable.
why is this argument wrong?

Are there any ordinals that are not definable?

Charlie Volkstorf
giovanni lagnese
Posted: Sat Jan 10, 2004 10:43 pm
Guest
"Charlie-Boo" <chvol@aol.com> ha scritto nel messaggio
news:3df1e59f.0401101903.760bc98f@posting.google.com...
Quote:
Are there any ordinals that are not definable?

sure!
giovanni lagnese
Posted: Sun Jan 11, 2004 1:19 am
Guest
Now I have just solved the problem, I have understood.
Thank you.
David C. Ullrich
Posted: Sun Jan 11, 2004 7:08 am
Guest
On Sat, 10 Jan 2004 23:37:51 GMT, "giovanni lagnese"
<ti.oiligriv@rotnac_groeg> wrote:

Quote:

the smallest non-definable ordinal is definable.
why is this argument wrong?

Because of fuzziness about the definition of "definable".

There must be undefinable ordinals, because there are only
countably many formulas of ZF that can be used to define
an ordinal. But "the smallest non-definable ordinal" is _not_
a definition of a ordinal _by_ a formula of ZF.



************************

David C. Ullrich
David C. Ullrich
Posted: Sun Jan 11, 2004 7:09 am
Guest
On 10 Jan 2004 19:03:42 -0800, chvol@aol.com (Charlie-Boo) wrote:

Quote:
"giovanni lagnese" <ti.oiligriv@rotnac_groeg> wrote
the smallest non-definable ordinal is definable.
why is this argument wrong?

Are there any ordinals that are not definable?

There are certainly ordinals that are not definable by
formulas of ZF, because there are only countably many
such formulas.

Quote:
Charlie Volkstorf


************************

David C. Ullrich
David C. Ullrich
Posted: Sun Jan 11, 2004 7:11 am
Guest
On Sat, 10 Jan 2004 19:00:41 -0800, William Elliot <marsh@xyzt.org>
wrote:

Quote:
On Sat, 10 Jan 2004, giovanni lagnese wrote:

If there is a non-definable ordinal, then

the smallest non-definable ordinal is definable.

which is a contradiction. Therefore....

why is this argument wrong?

It isn't. You didn't include the complete argument.

The resolution of the apparent paradox is not what
you seem to be hinting at - there certainly do exist
non-definable ordinals.

(Well, first we need to give a precise definition of
"definable ordinal" (and in fact it's fuzziness over
this definition that leads to the "paradox"). But
whatever definition we give is going to involve
a definition in some sense in the language of
ZF; hence there are only countably many
definitions, hence only countably many
definable ordinals.)


************************

David C. Ullrich
Antonio Espejo
Posted: Sun Jan 11, 2004 3:06 pm
Guest
David C. Ullrich <ullrich@math.okstate.edu> wrote in message news:<k0f200h8545mv9jr693cijub5n2kdknhme@4ax.com>...
Quote:
But "the smallest non-definable ordinal" is _not_
a definition of a ordinal _by_ a formula of ZF.

Yes, it is. Why not?
Charlie-Boo
Posted: Mon Jan 12, 2004 12:25 am
Guest
David C. Ullrich <ullrich@math.okstate.edu> wrote
Quote:
On 10 Jan 2004 19:03:42 -0800, chvol@aol.com (Charlie-Boo) wrote:

"giovanni lagnese" <ti.oiligriv@rotnac_groeg> wrote
the smallest non-definable ordinal is definable.
why is this argument wrong?

Are there any ordinals that are not definable?

There are certainly ordinals that are not definable by
formulas of ZF, because there are only countably many
such formulas.

If you require that the definition be expressed in a particular
formalism (e.g. ZFC) whose set of definitions has cardinality less
than the cardinality of the set of ordinals, then sure, but (1) who
says it has to be ZFC, and (2) might there be a formalism with a set
of definitions with cardinality that is not less than that (there's
one obvious - trivial - possibility, although I'm not sure if it'd
work!)?

C-B

Quote:
Charlie Volkstorf


************************

David C. Ullrich
David C. Ullrich
Posted: Mon Jan 12, 2004 7:34 am
Guest
On 11 Jan 2004 21:25:28 -0800, chvol@aol.com (Charlie-Boo) wrote:

Quote:
David C. Ullrich <ullrich@math.okstate.edu> wrote
On 10 Jan 2004 19:03:42 -0800, chvol@aol.com (Charlie-Boo) wrote:

"giovanni lagnese" <ti.oiligriv@rotnac_groeg> wrote
the smallest non-definable ordinal is definable.
why is this argument wrong?

Are there any ordinals that are not definable?

There are certainly ordinals that are not definable by
formulas of ZF, because there are only countably many
such formulas.

If you require that the definition be expressed in a particular
formalism (e.g. ZFC) whose set of definitions has cardinality less
than the cardinality of the set of ordinals, then sure, but (1) who
says it has to be ZFC, and (2) might there be a formalism with a set
of definitions with cardinality that is not less than that (there's
one obvious - trivial - possibility, although I'm not sure if it'd
work!)?

The short version: I was assuming that "definable" means
something like the _standard_ meaning. That doesn't
mean it has to be ZFC, but it does restrict us to a countable
language.

The long version:

For example, one could fix a model of set theory, and then
for each ordinal 0 in the language add a new constant symbol
c_o. Then we have a large language in which every ordinal
is "definable".

This sort of "large language" has uses, for example in
setting up non-standard analysis. But when one is talking
about "definable" whatever, with no qualification on what
"definable" means, one usually assumes a countable
language. The reason is that in a countable language
we can actually write down a symbol in English for
each formal symbol in the language - the "constant
symbols" mentioned in the previous paragraph are
a somewhat curious sort of "symbol", since we don't
and can't encode the symbols in English - most of
them are "symbols" that we can't write down, hence
not the sort of thing one is usually referring to when
one talks about definability.

A shorter version of the long version: If we allow
that sort of "large language" then everything is
definable, hence the word "definable" ceases to
mean anything.

Quote:
C-B

Charlie Volkstorf


************************

David C. Ullrich


************************

David C. Ullrich
David C. Ullrich
Posted: Mon Jan 12, 2004 7:35 am
Guest
On 11 Jan 2004 12:06:19 -0800, CASAFARFARA@terra.es (Antonio Espejo)
wrote:

Quote:
David C. Ullrich <ullrich@math.okstate.edu> wrote in message news:<k0f200h8545mv9jr693cijub5n2kdknhme@4ax.com>...
But "the smallest non-definable ordinal" is _not_
a definition of a ordinal _by_ a formula of ZF.

Yes, it is.

What formula defines it?

Quote:
Why not?


************************

David C. Ullrich
Aatu Koskensilta
Posted: Mon Jan 12, 2004 7:56 am
Guest
David C. Ullrich wrote:
Quote:
A shorter version of the long version: If we allow
that sort of "large language" then everything is
definable, hence the word "definable" ceases to
mean anything.

While every ordinal is obviously ordinal definable, i.e. definable with
ordinal parameters, everything need not be.

--
Aatu Koskensilta (aatu.koskensilta@xortec.fi)

"Wovon man nicht sprechen kann, daruber muss man schweigen"
- Ludwig Wittgenstein, Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus
David C. Ullrich
Posted: Mon Jan 12, 2004 9:44 am
Guest
On Mon, 12 Jan 2004 14:56:11 +0200, Aatu Koskensilta
<aatu.koskensilta@xortec.fi> wrote:

Quote:
David C. Ullrich wrote:
A shorter version of the long version: If we allow
that sort of "large language" then everything is
definable, hence the word "definable" ceases to
mean anything.

While every ordinal is obviously ordinal definable, i.e. definable with
ordinal parameters, everything need not be.

I said _that sort of large language_, not "that large language"...


************************

David C. Ullrich
Aatu Koskensilta
Posted: Tue Jan 13, 2004 2:35 am
Guest
David C. Ullrich wrote:

Quote:
On Mon, 12 Jan 2004 14:56:11 +0200, Aatu Koskensilta
aatu.koskensilta@xortec.fi> wrote:


David C. Ullrich wrote:

A shorter version of the long version: If we allow
that sort of "large language" then everything is
definable, hence the word "definable" ceases to
mean anything.

While every ordinal is obviously ordinal definable, i.e. definable with
ordinal parameters, everything need not be.


I said _that sort of large language_, not "that large language"...

I misinterpreted you, then. Sorry.

--
Aatu Koskensilta (aatu.koskensilta@xortec.fi)

"Wovon man nicht sprechen kann, daruber muss man schweigen"
- Ludwig Wittgenstein, Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus
 
Page 1 of 2    Goto page 1, 2  Next   All times are GMT - 5 Hours
The time now is Fri Dec 05, 2008 5:38 am