Try this:Is the statement "You should love everyone" a proposition? Or rather, is the statement "Bob states you should love everyone" a proposition? — jancanc
"You should love everyone" — jancanc
This is a proposition because it has a truth value. Being a normative claim ("should"), it can be either true or false. — TheMadFool
You should love everyone is a proposition. But it's not an imperative sentence. "Love everyone" is an imperative sentence, and it is not a proposition.
In English, the imperative sentence starts with a verb, followed by a predicate, and the pronoun of the person of the sentence is never included. The imperative sentence applies only to the second person; both in plural and in singular.
This is also an imperative sentence: — szardosszemagad
"You should love everyone" is a proposition. But it's not an imperative sentence. "Love everyone" is an imperative sentence, and it is not a proposition. — szardosszemagad
In English, the imperative sentence starts with a verb, followed by a predicate, and the pronoun of the person of the sentence is never included. The imperative sentence applies only to the second person; both in plural and in singular. — szardosszemagad
And arguably the "should" is understood too - unless you have in mind some way to otherwise compel the love of everyone. — tim wood
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