Harold R. (Hal)
Foster’s Prince Valiant=]
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copyright/trademark holders.
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VII. Reasons for Accepting the Axiom of Reducibility.
That the axiom of reducibility is self-evident is a
proposition which can hardly be maintained. But in fact self-evidence is never
more than a part of the reason for accepting an axiom, and is never
indispensable. The reason for accepting an axiom, as for accepting any other
proposition, is always largely inductive, namely that many propositions which
are nearly indubitable can be deduced from it, and that no equally plausible
way is known by which these propositions could be true if the axiom were false,
and nothing which is probably false can be deduced from it. If the axiom is
apparently self-evident, that only means, practically, that it is nearly
indubitable; for things have been thought to be self-evident and have yet
turned out to be false. And if the axiom itself is nearly indubitable, that
merely adds to the inductive evidence derived from the fact that its
consequences are nearly indubitable: it does not provide new evidence of a
radically different kind. Infallibility is never attainable, and therefore some
element of doubt should always attach to every axiom and to all its
consequences. In formal logic, the element of doubt is less than in most
sciences, but it is not absent, as appears from the fact that the paradoxes
followed from premises which were not previously known to require limitations.
In the case of the axiom of reducibility, the inductive evidence in its favor
is very strong, since the reasoning(s) which it permits and the results to
which it leads are all such as appear valid. But although it seems very
improbable that the axiom should turn out to be false, it is by no means
improbable that it should be found to be deducible from some other more
fundamental and more evident axiom. It is possible that the use of the
vicious-circle principle, as embodied in the above hierarchy of types, is more
drastic than it need be, and that by a less drastic use the necessity for the
axiom might be avoided. Such changes, however, would not render anything false
which had been asserted on the basis of the principles explained above: they
would merely provide easier proofs of the same theorems. There would seem,
therefore, to be but the slenderest ground for fearing that the use of the
axiom of reducibility may lead us into error.
Stan Lee (plot); Ernie Hart [H. E.
Huntley] (script) Pencils: Jack Kirby Inks: Don Heck
Ant Man and
the Wasp © Respective copyright/trademark holders.
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Harold R. (Hal)
Foster’s Prince Valiant
© Respective
copyright/trademark holders.
|
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