propositional statements like: "if all people have colour vision, then they all see the same colours" are the same as {A and B} predicates; you need to assume that both statements in IF.. THEN clauses are a product, it really says IF A and B, then AB.
So the idea is of a completion; selecting or including A means you get AB, unless you only added A to B. (A or B) is inclusive or exclusive, which introduces the idea of negation, you have A and not B, or B and not A.
A plus B remain 'complete' with summation. They 'disappear' with propositions in propositional calculus and in Boolean logic (which is of course a propositional calculus).
Therefore the statement: "I am a liar" is a proposition which cannot be proven in any propositional formal logic, it can only be negated (inverted). Therefore it is a tautology that no formal logic system is complete.
So the idea is of a completion; selecting or including A means you get AB, unless you only added A to B. (A or B) is inclusive or exclusive, which introduces the idea of negation, you have A and not B, or B and not A.
A plus B remain 'complete' with summation. They 'disappear' with propositions in propositional calculus and in Boolean logic (which is of course a propositional calculus).
Therefore the statement: "I am a liar" is a proposition which cannot be proven in any propositional formal logic, it can only be negated (inverted). Therefore it is a tautology that no formal logic system is complete.