There are tons of women who enjoy the damsel in distress trope and think it’s harmless fun.
There are also tons of women who think it perpetuates sexist stereotypes against women.
Both groups of women’s opinions are equally valid.
Does this not prove that the statement is independent?
woop_woop@lemmy.world 4 days ago
What do you mean by “independent”?
solrize@lemmy.ml 4 days ago
OP is making sort of a math joke. Independent (always in relation to a given set of axioms) means that you can’t prove the truth or falsehood of the statement from just those axioms. Particularly, there are alternate universes A and B, both consistent with the axioms, where the statement is true in A but false in B.
Here, the two universes are “women who like the trope” and “women who think the trope is sexist”. The two universes both existing means there is no definite truth of the matter, and “independent” evokes that indefiniteness.
Overall, a lame joke imho, but whatever. Sorry, OP.
woop_woop@lemmy.world 4 days ago
Given the community it was posted in, I assumed good faith. A quick Google of the terms used seemed to point to either someone taking theory too far or I was really missing something.
bluesheep@sh.itjust.works 3 days ago
That’s some highly pretentious smart-than-thou way of asking a question lmao
jannaultheal@lemmy.world 4 days ago
Yes, you’re right (except it’s **not ** a joke). Not sure why the other person seems to be dismissive about model theory, reducing an entire field of mathematics to “people are different and think different things”.
But I still wonder : Are there any axioms that can decide the statement about damsels in distress, just like how axioms can be added to ZFC that decide CH, like V=L and proper forcing axioms as I pointed out?
jannaultheal@lemmy.world 4 days ago
I mean in the same way that the continuum hypothesis is independent of ZFC. Godel constructed a model of ZFC where it’s true, and Cohen constructed a model where it’s false. We now have two models, both equally valid and satisfying all the axioms of ZFC, but in one, CH is true and in the other, CH is false, proving that CH is independent of ZFC.
Likewise, we can find one woman who enjoys the damsel in distress trope and think it’s harmless fun, and we can find another women who thinks it perpetuates sexist stereotypes against women. Just like in the case above, we have two women, whose views are equally valid, but coming to opposite conclusions. Therefore, we can conclude, just like Godel and Cohen did, that the statement about damsels in distress is independent of the axioms.
woop_woop@lemmy.world 4 days ago
As a layman who had to look up half that bullshit, I think you’re coming across something much simpler that cant and shouldn’t be solved by one of your theorems: people are different and think different things. With beliefs, there are many truths.