nomadreid said:
Uvohtufo and micromass don't like intuitionism. A variation on intuitionism is used for quantum logic, so I wouldn't discount it quite so lightly.
Uvohtufo thinks that Gödel's theorems are "confused". Perhaps he meant "confusing", since the theorems themselves are remarkable in their clarity.
Forbidding self-reference would eliminate all the wonderful things that are done with fixed points. You can keep self-reference in general yet show that certain applications are invalid.
I think I might have been a bit Brazen regarding some of my comments. But, maybe I can make a robust statement now that I've been thinking about this for a while.
1.
Intutionism
'Intuitionism' kind of has two meanings. 'Intuitionism' started as a philosophy of mathematics, that being a body of beliefs that Brouwer developed about mathematics
as it was and had been. During the same period, others were formalizing logic and axioms, and naturally 'intutionist logic' was concurrently invented.
Micromass, in response to me, was referring to set of axioms. And I yield to his statement. He is right, I certainly have no right to say a particular set of axioms is wrong. However, a philosophic proposition
about mathematics, can be right or wrong independently of the mathematical content which the philosophy is about. I consider Brouwer's contribution to mainly be a philosophic one, and I would still argue that Brouwer's intuitionist philosophy
about mathematics was wrong.
But this means nothing to intuitionist logic. If intuitionist logic has an application, then that's great, all the better. Rarely do good things have coherent philosophic foundations.
2.
Godel
By Godel's incompleteness theorems are 'confused' I mean, people are often confused when thinking about what that means that no set of axioms can be complete and consistent. I think I projected that onto Godel and his theorems themself, which was inappropriate.
I have met people who say things like 'I am surprised we can still do math given Godel's theorems.' Why would that be surprising? As if we did math only in homage to some deity of consistency, and not because math is useful. We had Arithmetic long before we tried to axiomize it. Leibnitz, Frege, and Wittgenstein all had simple non-axiomatic definitions of natural numbers which I don't believe yield anything contradictory.
Axiomizing math gives the false impression that math relies on these axioms, its better said I think that these axioms rely on our pre-existing understanding of mathematics. The axioms we make are not the properties that define arithmetic, but properties that arithmetic only has incidentally. Therefore, when something goes wrong with the axioms, then we must have another line of reasoning entirely to tell us that something goes wrong with the mathematics as well.
I think Godel essentially agreed with that I have just stated. Godel was a kind of platonist and thought that mathematical objects like numbers pre-existed our axioms of them. With this perspective we can see his theorems were a kind of validation of his philosophic views. And consistently, Godel criticized the Zermelo-Freankel axioms on the basis that they poorly represented math, which would make no sense if he had been of the opinion that math somehow rested on these axioms to begin with.