to not overload the word ‘true’ meaning comparison-to-causal-reality, the validity of a mathematical theorem
Ok, deductively true things should be labeled valid to avoid confusion with inductively true things. That’s an excellent resolution of the overloading of the word “true” in popular vernacular.
But sometimes you aren’t clear in earlier writings about whether you are referring to true or valid. For example, one message of Zero and One are not Probabilities is a sophisticated restatement of the problem of induction. Still, I’m honestly uncertain whether you intended a broader point. I mostly agree with what I understand, but there is some uncertainty about what precise rents are paid by these specific beliefs.
Ok, deductively true things should be labeled valid to avoid confusion with inductively true things. That’s an excellent resolution of the overloading of the word “true” in popular vernacular.
But sometimes you aren’t clear in earlier writings about whether you are referring to true or valid. For example, one message of Zero and One are not Probabilities is a sophisticated restatement of the problem of induction. Still, I’m honestly uncertain whether you intended a broader point. I mostly agree with what I understand, but there is some uncertainty about what precise rents are paid by these specific beliefs.