Philosophy of Mathematics Seminar (Monday - Week 2, HT23)
Monday 23 January, 4:30-6:30pm
Ryle Room, Radcliffe Humanities, and Online
Wesley Wrigley (London School of Economics): 'Absolutely Undecidable Arithmetical Propositions'
In an unpublished draft written in the 1930s, Gödel argued that the incompleteness theorems give us no reason to believe that some arithmetical propositions are undecidable in an absolute sense. In this talk, I'll argue that his position presupposes that we possess, under an appropriate idealisation, an ability which I call the recursive-ordinal recognition ability. I'll show that we have this ability if, and only if, there are no absolutely undecidable arithmetical propositions. I'll finish by outlining an argument against our possession of this ability, and indicate the broad kind of propositions to which the absolutely undecidable ones must belong.
The meeting will be in person and online. Those who wish to attend via Zoom, please write to Daniel Isaacson.
Philosophy of Mathematics Seminar Convenors: Daniel Isaacson and James Studd