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B1 Intermedio Inglés 13:52 Educational

Gödel's Incompleteness Theorem - Numberphile

Numberphile · 2,348,815 vistas · Añadido hace 3 semanas

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Subtítulos (178 segmentos)

00:00

[Marcus du Sautoy] I've been quite obsessed with Gödel's incompleteness theorem for many years because it kind of places this extraordinary

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limitation on what we might be able to know in mathematics. In fact, it's quite an unnerving theorem

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because at its heart it says there might be

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conjectures out there about numbers, for example something like Goldbach's conjecture, that might actually be true

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So it might be true that every even number is the sum of two primes

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but maybe within the

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axiomatic system we have for mathematics, there isn't a proof of that.

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The real worry is what if there's a true statement that I'm working away on which actually doesn't

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have a proof.

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Now his is a big kind of revelation for mathematics because I think ever since the ancient Greeks

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we believed that any true statement about mathematics will have a proof. It might be quite difficult to find like

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Fermat's last Theorem took 350 years to, before my colleague in Oxford Andrew Wiles found the proof.

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But I think we all have this kind of feeling like well surely every true statement has a proof

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but Gödel shows that actually there's a gap between

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truth and

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proof.

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I wrote it down here because it's quite cute

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So it's one of these cards: "the statement on the other side of this card is false".

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So let's suppose that's true. So it means that the statement on the other side of the card is false

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So we turn it over and then it says: "the statement on the other side of this card is true".

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Well, that's meant to be false. So it means the one on the other side is also false

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Oh, but we suppose that that was true, so that's false

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So the other side is true, which means that --and you get into this kind of infinite loop.

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Verbal paradoxes are fine because you don't expect every

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verbal sentence to have a truth value to it.

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But then, when I went up to university, I realized that [in] mathematics you can't have those; yet when I took this course

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on mathematical logic, and we learned about Gödel's incompleteness theorem, he used this kind of

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self-referential statement to really undermine our

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Belief that all true statements could be proved.

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There was a feeling like we should be able to prove that mathematics is something called consistent.

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That mathematics won't give rise to contradictions.

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This have been kind of inspired by certain kind of little paradoxes that

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people like Bertrand Russell had come up with.

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People might have come across this idea of "the set of all sets that don't contain themselves as members"

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and then you-- the challenges well is that set in this set or not?

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Actually, a really nice kind of version of this is another sort of mathematical

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