The matter I addressed whether self-referential sentences all must be disqualified, not whether the liar sentence in particular must be disqualified. — TonesInDeepFreeze
And we may consider sentences that are displayed without implication that they have an implied or even hypothetical speaker. There instances in which we may consider display of a sentence so that we may consider it in and of itself. — TonesInDeepFreeze
is it possible for someone to speak, "I am lying," while simultaneously meaning that they are lying and that they are not-lying? — Leontiskos
But, again, (1) It is a light year away from a "habit". — TonesInDeepFreeze
You wrote a falsehood, and apparently for effect. Instead of owning your own words, you speciously turn it back on me, to fault me for catching your lie. — TonesInDeepFreeze
You skipped my examples that are not of that kind. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Just now, you referenced the sentence "colourless green ideas sleep furiously" without there being an implied speaker other than a hypothetical one. — TonesInDeepFreeze
And previously — TonesInDeepFreeze
Also, consider the following sentence that I am not asserting but merely displaying so that we can talk about it:
This sentence has five words. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Sure you do. When someone considers the claim, "Colourless green ideas sleep furiously," you will inform them that the statement they are considering is nonsensical. We could say that to consider a possible utterance is to speak it secundum quid, and what is not able to be spoken is not able to be considered. The objection to such a consideration is always something like, "No one in their right mind would ever speak such a thing." To consider an utterance that has no possible speaker is to consider a nonsensical utterance.
Bringing this back, then, to the OP, we should ask whether the "sentences" in question—along with their attributed meaning—have any possible speaker. For example, is it possible for someone to speak, "I am lying," while simultaneously meaning that they are lying and that they are not-lying? No, it is not. There is no possible speaker in such cases, and hence the "sentences" are nonsensical (even in the additional cases where they are thought to have an extrinsic object). — Leontiskos
You are lying that I "continue". — TonesInDeepFreeze
Not for me. I can consider a sentence for consideration without assuming an implied speaker, and certainly not an implied speaker who asserts it to be true. — TonesInDeepFreeze
For example, in a math book may appear sentences that were typed by an author but are not considered to be specific to any one person. For example, I can display the sentence, "Harry Truman was a president" and that sentence can be discussed no matter that its just typed by me. — TonesInDeepFreeze
The other poster said that sentences have truth value only if they refer to "the material world" and not themselves. — TonesInDeepFreeze
This sentence has five words.
Not true? — TonesInDeepFreeze
There are formulations in which there is no speaker nor reference to "I' or things like that. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Many "philosophers" mistakenly hold that sentences have meaning apart from speakers, and when one reifies sentences in this way they have taken the first step towards this sort of self-confusion. They strangely believe that a sentence can self-negate itself because they have taken their eye off the ball: the speaker. — Leontiskos
Same goes with "This statement is false", not all statements that can be uttered in a language are meaningful, and I agree it's not much use to spend much time pondering about them — leo
it says nothing about anything, like saying “this statement is Fred”. — Fire Ologist
As the statement "colourless green ideas sleep furiously" expresses a nonsense proposition, then so does the statement "this statement is false". — RussellA
I agree it is not a statement, meaning it is not about anything. — Fire Ologist
For example, I can't conceive of anything as being other than it is, because as soon as I conceive it, it is what it is, and not something else. I cannot imagine something as being otherwise. This reminds of the law of identity, and it just might be. — Lionino
The Aristotelian can counter that without those qualifications the dialetheist has not said anything meaningful at all. — SEP | 11. Dialetheism, Paraconsistency, and Aristotle
To which the dialetheist may simply say "so much for Aristotle". — Banno
But what is second-order rules of discourse? — Lionino
Even in English when we say, "If you make that claim you will be contradicting yourself," we are shifting between two different registers: first-order claims and second-order rules of discourse (i.e. Thou shalt not contradict thyself). — Leontiskos
Note, though, that, "You are contradicting yourself," or, "This is a contradiction," is a different genus, and deviates from first-order discourse, moving into the meta-language. — Leontiskos
It's a mistake to think that there are laws of logic that have complete generality - and must be obeyed in all circumstances.
...
Logic sets up systems in which some things can be said and others are ruled out, but natural language is far broader than that, allowing for the breach of any such rule. — Banno
Elaborate. — Lionino
The English has to do with a relation between P and Q that transcends their discrete truth values. One way to see this is to note that an English speaker will be chastised if they use the phrase to represent a correlation that is neither causative nor indicative, but in the logic of material implication there is nothing at all wrong with this. — Leontiskos
Passing to another kind? What kind? — Lionino
Further, I am of the opinion that speech about contradictions is always a form of metabasis eis allo genos. Even in English when we say, "If you make that claim you will be contradicting yourself," we are shifting between two different registers: first-order claims and second-order rules of discourse (i.e. Thou shalt not contradict thyself). — Leontiskos
The key is that in English we prescind from many things that material implication does not prescind from — Leontiskos
So, what could one say about ¬(A→B) in English? — Lionino
And what about the following formulas:
A→(B∧¬B);
A→¬(B∧¬B);
¬(A→(B∧¬B))? — Lionino
...it just takes forever if the input is large. — Count Timothy von Icarus
However, if I includes enough nodes then all of the world's super computers running P(I) until the heat death of the universe still won't have been able to actually compute O yet. — Count Timothy von Icarus
So then, in a very important functional sense P(I) is not "the same thing as O." — Count Timothy von Icarus
The phrase «A does not imply a contradiction» really means specifically «A being true, it does not imply a contradiction». I think this meaning is indeed encapsulated in A→¬(B∧¬B), especially when it can be translated as «A implies True». — Lionino
They are found in "S". Or you can just replace "S" with axioms of the theory. Axioms are naturally assumed.
...
I don't. I know that S and ¬P can't coexist. I know that S, so ¬P can't be the case. ¬¬P is P. — Lionino
<Lionino's "reductio" seems to be ambiguous between senses (2) and (3)> — Leontiskos
(S∧¬P)→(B∧¬B)
S
∴ P — Lionino
(S∧¬P)→(B∧¬B)
S
∴ P — Lionino
What makes the Hamiltonian Path problem intractable is precisely the extremely large number of operations and this can be true for any program provided it has enough steps. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Yup. We agree there, and that's basically what I mean with the story. It's just an introduction to a thought with a funny conclusion, not an argument or anything of that sort. — Moliere
A more current but exactly the same example is Chidi from The Good Place :D — Moliere
Thanks that's very high praise :) -- It's all just me working out my own thoughts that I'm willing to share, though, and it's part of what I consider to be in fair trade: I like to read others' thoughts, and so share in kind. — Moliere
Parables are hard anywhere I think. What makes them difficult is what also makes them attractive. I'm very much attracted to stories, though, because I think they set out nuancesbetter thanwell even though the difficulty is that the nuances aren't specified and there's a certain amount of interpretation that has to go into them. — Moliere
Though maybe the distinction is between the sublime and the humorous? — Moliere
I never thought to interpret Balaam's Ass like that, though, which adds an interesting layer: "Get out of your head, dork!" is the kind of message I imagine which unites these. — Moliere
The problem shows up because logicians, who tend to be the folks most interested in this problem, only look for formal solutions. But the issue is that "eternal implication," or "implication occuring outside time" is assumed. We can think of computation abstractly, but it remains defined by step-wise actions. Yet these abstractions are taken to be "real" as opposed to merely tools.
However, in the brain or in digital computers two things hold:
1. Computation always occurs over time.
2. Computation involves communication and can be thought of in terms of communication models (some very good work on this has been done and the two end up being almost the same thing, "information processing" indeed.) — Count Timothy von Icarus
If this is right then (b∧¬b) introduces instances of formal equivalence that are not provable. — Leontiskos
Why? Because deduction/computation, be it in computers or humans, always involves communication and must occur over some region of space-time, not "all at once and all in one place." Aristotle gets at this in his essentially processual conception of demonstration in the Posterior Analytics. — Count Timothy von Icarus
So then, in a very important functional sense P(I) is not "the same thing as O." — Count Timothy von Icarus
Something that I read recently, very interesting, and I can't remember where, on the topic of logic, is that syllogisms can be said to be question begging (this is a point that has been made by philosophers in the past).
"All men are mortal; Socrates is a man; therefore, Socrates is mortal" is of no value, since we could not know that the premise, "All men are mortal" is true unless we already knew that Socrates is mortal. So we learn nothing from the syllogism. — Lionino
I know what you want to say, Meno. Do you realize what a debater's argument you are bringing up, that a man cannot search either for what he knows or for what he does not know? He cannot search for what he knows—since he knows it, there is no need to search—nor for what he does not know, for he does not know what to look for. — Meno, 80e, (tr. Grube)
Every time we make an inference on the basis of a contradiction a metabasis eis allo genos occurs (i.e. the sphere of discourse shifts in such a way that the demonstrative validity of the inference is precluded). — Leontiskos
One is a statement in the meta-language and the other in the object language. They are different levels of statement. — TonesInDeepFreeze
This sounds like the "Scandal of Deduction," and it actually holds not just for syllogisms but for all deterministic computation and deduction. From an information theoretic perspective, because the results/outputs of computation and deduction always occur with a probability equal to 100% it follows that they are not informative. Everything contained in the conclusion must be contained in the premise; we learn nothing from deduction. — Count Timothy von Icarus
1. (φ^~φ) means explosion
2. (φ^~φ) means reductio-rejecton
3. (φ^~φ) means false — Leontiskos
meta-language — Leontiskos
So, what is a "direct proof"? I gather you think using MT is direct, but RAA isn't? WHat's the distinction here? — Banno
Modus tollens requires no "and-elimination" step. Is that a good way to put it in your language? — Leontiskos
One is a statement in the meta-language and the other in the object language. They are different levels of statement. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I didn't suppose ¬P. — Lionino
I know that S follows from the axioms of the theory. Not an assumption.
Conclusion: P. — Lionino
(S∧¬P), S does. — Lionino
This is the formal conclusion, before the and-elimination step of the reductio takes hold:
A→(B∧¬B) {Assumption}
A {Assumption}
∴ (¬A ∨ ¬(A→(B∧¬B)))
...which is the same as, "∴ (A ∨ (A→(B∧¬B)))" We are merely picking an assumption to be true or false, for no reason.
Whether we call (1) a supposition or (2) a supposition is arbitrary, and purely stipulative. There is no formal reason to draw one of the disjuncts of (3) rather than another. — Leontiskos
We do because S fully follows from the axioms of a theory. — Lionino
From within a theory T, the statement S is known to be true. We don't know whether P is true or not.
We verify that S∧P implies a contradiction.
Thus P cannot be the case within that theory T.
That is paramount for proofs from contradiction in mathematics. — Lionino
The issue is that we don't know S is true any more than we know that ¬P is true. All we really know is that S and ¬P are inconsistent. Given their inconsistency, one must be false. Picking one to be false without any other information is an arbitrary move. — Leontiskos
This isn't a proof of Modus tollens. — flannel jesus
ρ→(φ^~φ) (premise)
~(φ^~φ) (law of non contradiction)
:. ~ρ (modus tollens) — flannel jesus
We can apply Aristotelian syllogistic to diagnose the way that the modus tollens is being applied in the enthymeme:
((A→(B∧¬B))
∴ ¬A
Viz.:
Any consequent which is false proves the antecedent
(B∧¬B) is a consequent which is false
∴ (B∧¬B) proves the antecedent
In this case the middle term is not univocal. It is analogical (i.e. it posses analogical equivocity). Therefore a metabasis is occurring. As I said earlier... — Leontiskos
Now one could argue for the analogical middle term, but the point is that in this case we are taking modus tollens into new territory. Modus tollens is based on the more restricted sense of 'false', and this alternative sense is a unfamiliar to modus tollens. This is a bit like putting ethanol fuel in your gasoline engine and hoping that it still runs.
Note that the (analogical) equivocity of 'false' flows into the inferential structure, and we could connote this with scare quotes. (B∧¬B) is "false" and therefore the conclusion is "implied." The argument is "valid." — Leontiskos
We don't know whether P is true or not. We know S is true. S being true and P being false leads to a contradiction. Therefore we have ascertained that P is true. No assumption is needed or allowed. — Lionino
But the issue is that we already know S is true. — Lionino
This is the RAA, innit? :smile: — Lionino
So the question is: how do we choose between either? Isn't it by modus tollens? — Lionino
(S∧¬P)→(B∧¬B)
S
∴ P — Lionino
The truth-functionalist is likely to object to me, “But your claims are not verifiable within classical logic!” Yes, that is much the point. When we talk about metabasis eis allo genos, or contradiction per se, or reductio ad absurdum, we are always engaged in some variety of metalogical discourse.
...
How can we start inching towards the difference between ‘false’ and ‘FALSE’? First I should say that the “proposition” (b∧¬b) can be either. It can be interpreted as false or as FALSE each time we touch it with our mind. What this means is that terms like (b∧¬b) or ‘false’ are metalogically equivocal or ambiguous given the question we are considering... — Leontiskos