Under my analysis, that's where it falls apart. It is a sentence, but not a proposition. Propositions have truth values. Sentences only have truth values if they can be translated into propositions.It is well stated proposition — Jaydison
It is maybe the case that statements should have grounds in order to assert whether that statement is true or false. But also, it is not wrong to assume its truth and falsity. — Jaydison
The biggest problem is not with the predicate, it is with the subject - 'this sentence'. The problem is that, when one tries to formally state the sentence, the predicate expands recursively without limit. It's like the delightful joke that, when fractal pioneer mathematician Benoit B Mandelbrot was asked what the middle initial 'B' in his name stood for, he replied 'Benoit B Mandelbrot'.The sentence contains a subj and pred. One thing that bothers me is the pred. "is not true". That must be a truth-predicate as it function as one — Jaydison
The idea here is simple. If giving the LP either the value of "true" or the value of "false" results in an inescapable contradiction, we can avoid the Paradox by saying that the LP has neither value, thus preventing the contradiction. There are many arguable problems here. Firstly, this would seem to require abandoning the Law of the Excluded Middle or else the Principle of Bivalence. Now, I've no qualms with dropping Classical Logic in favor of a Non-Classical Logic, but I get the feeling many people would not like that. — MindForged
Do we have to abandon classical logic when we claim that the sentence "go away" is neither true nor false?
No, because that sentence isn't truth-apt, nor can I see how you could attach a truth predicate to it. Its just a command. The Liar sentences seem no different that other truth-apt sentences, in which case, denying it a truth-value would necessitate adopting some type of Non-Classical Logic. — MindForged
It might seem a truth-apt sentence but the claim is that it isn't. Its syntax is misleading.
How so? This is why I mentioned the Williamson quote, because the idea that there is a simple solution to this problem is vitiated by the fact that there is not a standard resolution to these paradoxes amongst logicians. If it were simply a syntactic issue, the problem wouldn't persist. And what do you think that syntactic issue is, anyway? — MindForged
It's misleading because, as you say, it seems like a truth-apt sentence, being that it looks like most other truth-apt sentences, but it isn't.
And it's not that it's a syntactic issue. It's actually a semantic issue. Despite it's structure, it doesn't actually mean anything. Truth-predication is only meaningful when there's some evaluable fact about the world. Liar-like sentences don't have such a thing (much like the sentence "I am a squiloople").
I'm aware that it's a semantic issue, you were the one who said it was an issue of syntax. — MindForged
That solution seems dubious, as many truth-apt sentences have nothing to do with the world (e.g. mathematical and logical truths).
Further, that seems subject to an obvious set of Revenge Paradoxes:
"This sentence doesn't mean anything"
"This sentence doesn't involve evaluate to a fact about the world"
...
And again, the Liar Sentence does have a referent: Itself. So in don't understand how that constitutes a solution.
Its syntax is what misleads people into believing it's truth-apt.
The Liar Paradox is a natural language sentence, not a sentence made in some formal system.
Sorry, I wasn't clear. I meant that it being true or false doesn't mean anything given that there's no evaluable fact in virtue of which it is either true or false.
I think you're treading down the path that Kripke went down. And speaking of Kripke, you should see some of his work on the Liar Paradoxes. — MindForged
It doesn't mean anything empirical, but that doesn't mean it lacks a meaning. It's a sentence which is true when it is false, and vice-versa.
It's misleading because, as you say, it seems like a truth-apt sentence, being that it looks like most other truth-apt sentences, but it isn't. — Michael
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