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Full Idea
No deductive system is semantically incomplete in and of itself; rather a deductive system is incomplete with respect to a specified formal semantics.
Gist of Idea
A deductive system is only incomplete with respect to a formal semantics
Source
Marcus Rossberg (First-order Logic, 2nd-order, Completeness [2004], §3)
A Reaction
This important point indicates that a system might be complete with one semantics and incomplete with another. E.g. second-order logic can be made complete by employing a 'Henkin semantics'.
10751 | Second-order logic needs the sets, and its consequence has epistemological problems [Rossberg] |
10753 | Logical consequence is intuitively semantic, and captured by model theory [Rossberg] |
10752 | Γ |- S says S can be deduced from Γ; Γ |= S says a good model for Γ makes S true [Rossberg] |
10754 | In proof-theory, logical form is shown by the logical constants [Rossberg] |
10756 | A model is a domain, and an interpretation assigning objects, predicates, relations etc. [Rossberg] |
10758 | If models of a mathematical theory are all isomorphic, it is 'categorical', with essentially one model [Rossberg] |
10757 | Henkin semantics has a second domain of predicates and relations (in upper case) [Rossberg] |
10759 | There are at least seven possible systems of semantics for second-order logic [Rossberg] |
10755 | A deductive system is only incomplete with respect to a formal semantics [Rossberg] |
10761 | Completeness can always be achieved by cunning model-design [Rossberg] |