Geoffrey Spear wrote:
Can anyone expound on why it would be necessary to have both UNDECIDABLE and another category, whatever it ends up being called, for when there's not enough information to determine if the question is undecidable? If it's "not capable of being accurately described as either false or true, at the time the inquiry case was initiated" due to lack of information, doesn't UNDECIDABLE pretty much cover it?
UNDECIDABLE is intended for things that are logically impossible to assign a truth value, e.g. "This statement is false" [1]. UNKNOWN is intended for things that have a truth value but we don't know what it is, e.g. "the Goldbach conjecture is true". [1] I expect that Peekee ("neither legal nor illegal") will be submitting a fuzzy-logic proto any day now.