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Logic and Logical Philosophy

Fitch's Paradox in Fusions of Epistemic and Alethic Logics
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Fitch's Paradox in Fusions of Epistemic and Alethic Logics

Authors

  • Arkadiusz Wójcik Faculty of Philosophy and Cognitive Science, University of Białystok https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9895-8449

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.12775/LLP.2025.027

Keywords

Fitch’s paradox, knowability paradox, knowability principle, epistemic logic, fusions of modal logics, modal correspondence theory

Abstract

In this paper, we analyze Fitch’s paradox of knowability in the framework of fusions of epistemic and alethic modal logics. The paradox arises from accepting the knowability principle, which states that all truths are knowable. However, this leads to the unacceptable conclusion that all truths are known. We introduce a logical system that incorporates all assumptions used by Fitch in his original reasoning, including the knowability principle. We present a natural semantics for this logic, proving the soundness and completeness theorem. Additionally, we present a new semantic proof of the knowability paradox, demonstrating that the problematic conclusion can be derived independently of Fitch’s original proof and showing that the knowability principle itself is the source of the paradox. Using the formal tools introduced, we conduct a semantic analysis of the paradox, which allows us to identify the root cause of its occurrence. Finally, we propose a weakened version of the knowability principle that avoids paradoxical conclusions.

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Published

2025-12-05

How to Cite

1.
WÓJCIK, Arkadiusz. Fitch’s Paradox in Fusions of Epistemic and Alethic Logics. Logic and Logical Philosophy. Online. 5 December 2025. pp. 1-37. [Accessed 8 December 2025]. DOI 10.12775/LLP.2025.027.
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