A copy of this work was available on the public web and has been preserved in the Wayback Machine. The capture dates from 2022; you can also visit the original URL.
The file type is application/pdf
.
On Martin-Löf's Constructive Optimism
2020
Studia Semiotyczne
DOI: http://doi.org/10.26333/sts.xxxiv1.10 In his 1951 Gibbs Memorial Lecture, Kurt Gödel put forth his famous disjunction that either the power of the mind outstrips that of any machine or there are absolutely unsolvable problems. The view that there are no absolutely unsolvable problems is optimism, the view that there are such problems is pessimism. In his 1995—and, revised in 2013—Verificationism Then and Now, Per Martin-Löf presents an illustrative argument for a constructivist form of
doaj:bba19ef3308b4599a6c56681dd7ebad1
fatcat:v7kqutt2fvgdljfcctxan2a7fi