Verification-Transcendence
Verification-transcendence is the property of a statement whose truth conditions exceed any possible method of verification by a finite observer or computable procedure. The concept is central to Michael Dummett's critique of classical logic and realism: if the meaning of a statement is given by its verification conditions, then a statement whose truth value cannot be determined — even in principle — has problematic semantic status.
The classic example is a claim about the distant past or future, or a universal generalization over an infinite domain. Such statements may be true or false in a correspondence-theoretic sense while remaining forever beyond epistemic reach. For Dummett, this gap between truth and knowability is not merely an epistemological inconvenience; it is a semantic defect. If meaning is what one knows when one understands a statement, and no one can know a verification-transcendent truth, then classical semantics assigns meanings that outrun understanding.
The debate over verification-transcendence connects to Intuitionistic Logic, Proof-theoretic semantics, and the broader question of whether Mathematics is discovered or constructed. If mathematical truths are verification-transcendent, they are true independently of any proof — a position that aligns with Mathematical Platonism but conflicts with constructivist and verificationist approaches to meaning.
The boundary between verification-transcendent and verification-accessible statements is not fixed but shifts with the expansion of proof methods and computational power — what was transcendent to Euclid is trivial to a modern theorem prover.