• Re: Making the body of knowledge computable

    From =?UTF-8?B?QW5kcsOpIEcuIElzYWFr?=@agisaak@gm.invalid to comp.theory on Wed Feb 11 13:43:45 2026
    From Newsgroup: comp.theory

    On 2026-02-10 21:59, olcott wrote:
    We completely replace the foundation of truth conditional
    semantics with proof theoretic semantics. Then expressions
    are "true on the basis of meaning expressed in language"
    only to the extent that all their meaning comes from
    inferential relations to other expressions of that language.
    This is a purely linguistic PTS notion of truth with no
    connections outside the inferential system.

    Well-founded proof-theoretic semantics reject expressions
    lacking a "well-founded justification tree" as meaningless.
    reCx (~Provable(T, x) rco Meaningless(T, x))

    Proof-theoretic semantics makes no such claim. That's your claim and you should stop attributing it to others.

    Andr|-
    --
    To email remove 'invalid' & replace 'gm' with well known Google mail
    service.

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  • From olcott@polcott333@gmail.com to comp.theory,sci.logic,sci.math on Wed Feb 11 15:27:45 2026
    From Newsgroup: comp.theory

    On 2/11/2026 2:43 PM, Andr|- G. Isaak wrote:
    On 2026-02-10 21:59, olcott wrote:
    We completely replace the foundation of truth conditional
    semantics with proof theoretic semantics. Then expressions
    are "true on the basis of meaning expressed in language"
    only to the extent that all their meaning comes from
    inferential relations to other expressions of that language.
    This is a purely linguistic PTS notion of truth with no
    connections outside the inferential system.

    Well-founded proof-theoretic semantics reject expressions
    lacking a "well-founded justification tree" as meaningless.
    reCx (~Provable(T, x) rco Meaningless(T, x))

    Proof-theoretic semantics makes no such claim. That's your claim and you should stop attributing it to others.

    Andr|-


    That is a correct paraphrase of the claims that it
    always does make. Try and show otherwise.

    Meaning of expressions only comes from inferential
    relations to other expressions. The historical peer
    reviewed papers boiled down to their bare essence.
    They say the same thing in lots of paragraphs.

    This is the bottom line basis across authors
    Meaning as Introduction/Elimination Rules
    Gerhard Gentzen (1934/35), "Investigations into Logical Deduction"


    Written by one of the best experts in the field https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/proof-theoretic-semantics/
    --
    Copyright 2026 Olcott<br><br>

    My 28 year goal has been to make <br>
    "true on the basis of meaning expressed in language"<br>
    reliably computable for the entire body of knowledge.<br><br>

    This required establishing a new foundation<br>
    --- Synchronet 3.21b-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From =?UTF-8?B?QW5kcsOpIEcuIElzYWFr?=@agisaak@gm.invalid to comp.theory on Wed Feb 11 16:30:43 2026
    From Newsgroup: comp.theory

    On 2026-02-11 14:27, olcott wrote:
    On 2/11/2026 2:43 PM, Andr|- G. Isaak wrote:
    On 2026-02-10 21:59, olcott wrote:
    We completely replace the foundation of truth conditional
    semantics with proof theoretic semantics. Then expressions
    are "true on the basis of meaning expressed in language"
    only to the extent that all their meaning comes from
    inferential relations to other expressions of that language.
    This is a purely linguistic PTS notion of truth with no
    connections outside the inferential system.

    Well-founded proof-theoretic semantics reject expressions
    lacking a "well-founded justification tree" as meaningless.
    reCx (~Provable(T, x) rco Meaningless(T, x))

    Proof-theoretic semantics makes no such claim. That's your claim and
    you should stop attributing it to others.

    Andr|-


    That is a correct paraphrase of the claims that it
    always does make. Try and show otherwise.

    Not even remotely.

    And the burden of proof is on you to justify your claims. Please quote
    someone working on PTS who claims that reCx (~Provable(T, x) rco Meaningless(T, x))

    Andr|-
    --
    To email remove 'invalid' & replace 'gm' with well known Google mail
    service.

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  • From olcott@polcott333@gmail.com to comp.theory,sci.logic,sci.math on Wed Feb 11 17:41:58 2026
    From Newsgroup: comp.theory

    On 2/11/2026 5:30 PM, Andr|- G. Isaak wrote:
    On 2026-02-11 14:27, olcott wrote:
    On 2/11/2026 2:43 PM, Andr|- G. Isaak wrote:
    On 2026-02-10 21:59, olcott wrote:
    We completely replace the foundation of truth conditional
    semantics with proof theoretic semantics. Then expressions
    are "true on the basis of meaning expressed in language"
    only to the extent that all their meaning comes from
    inferential relations to other expressions of that language.
    This is a purely linguistic PTS notion of truth with no
    connections outside the inferential system.

    Well-founded proof-theoretic semantics reject expressions
    lacking a "well-founded justification tree" as meaningless.
    reCx (~Provable(T, x) rco Meaningless(T, x))

    Proof-theoretic semantics makes no such claim. That's your claim and
    you should stop attributing it to others.

    Andr|-


    That is a correct paraphrase of the claims that it
    always does make. Try and show otherwise.

    Not even remotely.

    And the burden of proof is on you to justify your claims. Please quote someone working on PTS who claims that reCx (~Provable(T, x) rco Meaningless(T, x))

    Andr|-


    That is fair.

    1.2 Inferentialism, intuitionism, anti-realism
    Proof-theoretic semantics is inherently inferential,
    as it is inferential activity which manifests itself
    in proofs. It thus belongs to inferentialism (a term
    coined by Brandom, see his 1994; 2000) according to
    which inferences and the rules of inference establish
    the meaning of expressions

    https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/proof-theoretic-semantics/#InfeIntuAntiReal


    The guy that wrote the article is a major player in the field
    --
    Copyright 2026 Olcott<br><br>

    My 28 year goal has been to make <br>
    "true on the basis of meaning expressed in language"<br>
    reliably computable for the entire body of knowledge.<br><br>

    This required establishing a new foundation<br>
    --- Synchronet 3.21b-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From =?UTF-8?B?QW5kcsOpIEcuIElzYWFr?=@agisaak@gm.invalid to comp.theory on Wed Feb 11 17:17:32 2026
    From Newsgroup: comp.theory

    On 2026-02-11 16:41, olcott wrote:
    On 2/11/2026 5:30 PM, Andr|- G. Isaak wrote:
    On 2026-02-11 14:27, olcott wrote:
    On 2/11/2026 2:43 PM, Andr|- G. Isaak wrote:
    On 2026-02-10 21:59, olcott wrote:
    We completely replace the foundation of truth conditional
    semantics with proof theoretic semantics. Then expressions
    are "true on the basis of meaning expressed in language"
    only to the extent that all their meaning comes from
    inferential relations to other expressions of that language.
    This is a purely linguistic PTS notion of truth with no
    connections outside the inferential system.

    Well-founded proof-theoretic semantics reject expressions
    lacking a "well-founded justification tree" as meaningless.
    reCx (~Provable(T, x) rco Meaningless(T, x))

    Proof-theoretic semantics makes no such claim. That's your claim and
    you should stop attributing it to others.

    Andr|-


    That is a correct paraphrase of the claims that it
    always does make. Try and show otherwise.

    Not even remotely.

    And the burden of proof is on you to justify your claims. Please quote
    someone working on PTS who claims that reCx (~Provable(T, x) rco
    Meaningless(T, x))

    Andr|-


    That is fair.

    1.2 Inferentialism, intuitionism, anti-realism
    Proof-theoretic semantics is inherently inferential,
    as it is inferential activity which manifests itself
    in proofs. It thus belongs to inferentialism (a term
    coined by Brandom, see his 1994; 2000) according to
    which inferences and the rules of inference establish
    the meaning of expressions

    That doesn't support your position, either the quote above or the entire section in which it is embedded. You're imagining things which simply
    aren't there.

    Andr|-
    --
    To email remove 'invalid' & replace 'gm' with well known Google mail
    service.

    --- Synchronet 3.21b-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From olcott@polcott333@gmail.com to comp.theory,sci.logic,sci.math on Wed Feb 11 19:09:42 2026
    From Newsgroup: comp.theory

    On 2/11/2026 6:17 PM, Andr|- G. Isaak wrote:
    On 2026-02-11 16:41, olcott wrote:
    On 2/11/2026 5:30 PM, Andr|- G. Isaak wrote:
    On 2026-02-11 14:27, olcott wrote:
    On 2/11/2026 2:43 PM, Andr|- G. Isaak wrote:
    On 2026-02-10 21:59, olcott wrote:
    We completely replace the foundation of truth conditional
    semantics with proof theoretic semantics. Then expressions
    are "true on the basis of meaning expressed in language"
    only to the extent that all their meaning comes from
    inferential relations to other expressions of that language.
    This is a purely linguistic PTS notion of truth with no
    connections outside the inferential system.

    Well-founded proof-theoretic semantics reject expressions
    lacking a "well-founded justification tree" as meaningless.
    reCx (~Provable(T, x) rco Meaningless(T, x))

    Proof-theoretic semantics makes no such claim. That's your claim
    and you should stop attributing it to others.

    Andr|-


    That is a correct paraphrase of the claims that it
    always does make. Try and show otherwise.

    Not even remotely.

    And the burden of proof is on you to justify your claims. Please
    quote someone working on PTS who claims that reCx (~Provable(T, x) rco
    Meaningless(T, x))

    Andr|-


    That is fair.

    1.2 Inferentialism, intuitionism, anti-realism
    Proof-theoretic semantics is inherently inferential,
    as it is inferential activity which manifests itself
    in proofs. It thus belongs to inferentialism (a term
    coined by Brandom, see his 1994; 2000) according to
    which inferences and the rules of inference establish
    the meaning of expressions

    That doesn't support your position, either the quote above or the entire section in which it is embedded. You're imagining things which simply
    aren't there.

    Andr|-


    When we understand that linguistic truth (just like
    an ordinary dictionary) expressions of language only
    get their semantic meaning from other expressions of
    language then we directly understand entirely based on
    the meaning of words that when no such connection exists
    then no semantic meaning is derived.

    Proof Theoretic Semantics is doing this same thing
    whether you ever understand it or not.

    As I have been saying for many years before I ever
    heard the term Proof Theoretic Semantics expressions
    of language derive all of their semantic meaning
    from semantic connections to other expressions of
    language. Also as I have been saying for many years
    these connections can be formalized syntactically
    in several different ways
    --
    Copyright 2026 Olcott<br><br>

    My 28 year goal has been to make <br>
    "true on the basis of meaning expressed in language"<br>
    reliably computable for the entire body of knowledge.<br><br>

    This required establishing a new foundation<br>
    --- Synchronet 3.21b-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Tristan Wibberley@tristan.wibberley+netnews2@alumni.manchester.ac.uk to comp.theory on Thu Feb 12 19:10:14 2026
    From Newsgroup: comp.theory

    On 11/02/2026 23:30, Andr|- G. Isaak wrote:
    Please quote someone working on PTS who claims that reCx (~Provable(T, x)
    rco Meaningless(T, x))

    Depends on the meaning of "Provable" and of "Meaningless". We don't even
    know what objects the system has for quantification, he says it's a
    syntactical system but I'm starting to think that only has meaning as a specific sort of abstract formal system (semantical, technically).
    --
    Tristan Wibberley

    The message body is Copyright (C) 2026 Tristan Wibberley except
    citations and quotations noted. All Rights Reserved except that you may,
    of course, cite it academically giving credit to me, distribute it
    verbatim as part of a usenet system or its archives, and use it to
    promote my greatness and general superiority without misrepresentation
    of my opinions other than my opinion of my greatness and general
    superiority which you _may_ misrepresent. You definitely MAY NOT train
    any production AI system with it but you may train experimental AI that
    will only be used for evaluation of the AI methods it implements.

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  • From olcott@polcott333@gmail.com to comp.theory,sci.logic,sci.math on Thu Feb 12 14:26:21 2026
    From Newsgroup: comp.theory

    On 2/12/2026 1:10 PM, Tristan Wibberley wrote:
    On 11/02/2026 23:30, Andr|- G. Isaak wrote:
    Please quote someone working on PTS who claims that reCx (~Provable(T, x)
    rco Meaningless(T, x))

    Depends on the meaning of "Provable" and of "Meaningless". We don't even
    know what objects the system has for quantification, he says it's a syntactical system but I'm starting to think that only has meaning as a specific sort of abstract formal system (semantical, technically).


    We completely replace the foundation of Truth Conditional
    Semantics with Proof Theoretic Semantics (PTS). Then
    expressions are "true on the basis of meaning expressed
    in language" only to the extent that all their meaning
    comes from inferential relations to other expressions of
    that language. This is the purely linguistic PTS notion
    of truth having no connections outside the inferential system.

    Expressions of language of formal system L only have
    PTS meaning in L the exact same way that a word only
    has meaning in a dictionary when that word is in that
    dictionary.
    --
    Copyright 2026 Olcott<br><br>

    My 28 year goal has been to make <br>
    "true on the basis of meaning expressed in language"<br>
    reliably computable for the entire body of knowledge.<br><br>

    This required establishing a new foundation<br>
    --- Synchronet 3.21b-Linux NewsLink 1.2