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9552 | Sentences are consistent if they can all be true; for Frege it is that no contradiction can be deduced [Chihara] |
Full Idea: In first-order logic a set of sentences is 'consistent' iff there is an interpretation (or structure) in which the set of sentences is true. ..For Frege, though, a set of sentences is consistent if it is not possible to deduce a contradiction from it. | |
From: Charles Chihara (A Structural Account of Mathematics [2004], 02.1) | |
A reaction: The first approach seems positive, the second negative. Frege seems to have a higher standard, which is appealing, but the first one seems intuitively right. There is a possible world where this could work. |