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    A proof alters the grammar of a proposition. — Carmelics
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    Challenges→Mathematical propositions whose truth or falsehood remains undecided are not the same kind of thing as ordinary propositions.

    A proof alters the grammar of a proposition.

    Philosophy of LanguageTruth & Knowledge
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    Mathematical propositions whose truth or falsehood remains undecided are not the...Undecidable mathematical propositions have not been given a proof, so their gram...What we call 'propositions' in ordinary cases are grammatically shaped by the pr...

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    A proof alters the grammar of a proposition, so an unproved statement ...88%What we call 'propositions' in ordinary cases are grammatically shaped...78%Undecidable mathematical propositions have not been given a proof, so ...77%This creates a contradiction between what is asserted and what is impl...76%

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    SEP: wittgenstein-mathematics
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    In discussions of the provability of mathematical propositions it is sometimes said that there are substantial propositions of mathematics whose truth or falsehood must remain undecided. What the people who say that don’t realize is that such propositions, if we can use them and want to call them “propositions”, are not at all the same as what are called “propositions” in other cases; because a proof alters the grammar of a proposition. (PG 367)

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