Would it be possible to use a paraconsistent logic and axioms similar to ZFC to create a formal sytem, that can be proven to be non-trivial (so that there are some statements which can´t be proven in the system), and which can serve as a foundation for mathematics?
Because it´s possible that the current ZFC + first order logic foundation is inconsistent, and if it´s inconsistent then it would be completely trivial and worthless. And according to my understanding of gödel´s second incompleteness theorem it´s impossible to show that ZFC is consistent (at least without using a formal system that´s even more questionable). This means it´s impossible to prove that the current ZFC foundations are non-trivial, and the same holds for any other foundation that uses first order logic and contains basic arithmetic.
Naturally, I think it would be more desirable to have a foundation that is demonstrably non-trivial, than a foundation where we can´t possibly prove non-triviality. That´s why I wonder whether a paraconsistent foundation could be demonstrably non-trivial.
So basically I have two questions:
Is it possible to have a non-trivial paraconsistent formal system containing basic arithmetic, whose non-triviality can be proven in "weaker" formal systems?
If such a system exist, could it possibly be a reasonable foundation for mathematics?