But I think this is wrong. S is logically & semantically equivalent to (S') "All statements, but this statement, are false and this statement is false". But S' is illogical since its part "this statement is false" can't be given a truth value. — Pippen
Then the falsity of "All statements are false" would just mean that some statements are true, and some statements are false. — Michael Ossipoff
But I say that "All statements are false" has no truth value and therefore can't be false. — Pippen
So you're saying S can't be false because S', the equivalent statement, can't be false because of the "S is false" part. — TheMadFool
which poisons the whole conjunction eventually — Pippen
Is nobody here with real university logic knowledge? — Pippen
University logic says you did not prove anything. Your statements are meaningless. — Meta
Because Your arguments can not be formalized. You can't speak about "all statements" formally. — Meta
2. Since we can always go from "All x are y" (x may stand for 1,2,3 here) to for instance "All x are y and 2 are y" without changing the truth value, it must hold that A is logically equivalent to (A') "All statements are false and this statement is false", so A <-> A'. — Pippen
How can we say it is well-formed when natural language is informal, and hence does not have a notion of well-formed statement? Do you just mean it is grammatically correct? If so, that doesn't tell us much as the statement 'The cheese of five is sad' is also grammatically correct.D is a well formed definition in the natural language. — Meta
Depending on what language we are using, this may be possible. For instance, the sentence:Same goes for sentences. We can't have a statement A where the definition of A mentions A. — Meta
This argument fails when applied to a natural language, because there is no precise definition for <is a well-formed formula>. Only our intuition can tell us what do we consider a WFF. There isn't a fixed set of relation symbols either. — Meta
Any anyways we are not talking about real self-reference just some kind of reflection. Let's modify the statement of the Berry paradox:
"The definition with the least Godel number not definable in fewer than 20 words."
This is also paradoxical. — Meta
Or "The statement with the least Godel number that does not contain the first letter of the alphabet."
This can be a paradox. — Meta
As I mentioned in a private message, I'm not entirely sure this step holds. What is the reference of "this" above? If it is "this statement is false" (taking it to have small scope), then your proposed rule would take us from "All statements are false" to ""This statement is false" is false". But the latter one is false, not truth-valueless. So the whole conjunction is false. — Nagase
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