If you like, the liar has the correct structure for a statement but fails to be a proposition because it cannot be either true nor false. — Banno
sentences about truth and falsity are not well formed in first order logic. So there is no translation of L nor L'.in that there's no error. — TheMadFool
When you say that the statement "this statement is false" is neither true nor false you're not saying that the statement "this statement is false" means "this statement is neither true nor false". You're conflating statement A with a (different) statement about A. A and B are not logically equivalent. — Michael
You all are right.
A: this statement is false
A has no truth value
So, we should be saying: "A is neither true nor false" instead of ''this statement is neither true nor false'' — TheMadFool
Could you do it for me please, as I got a bit tired doing the above.
Let me know when you're done. — andrewk
L: "this sentence is written in English"
L': "L is true"
L is not equivalent to L'
L: "this sentence is false"
L': "L is neither true nor false"
L is not equivalent to L'. — Michael
I don't think that really works. There's nothing about the liar which is any different than any other self-referential sentence. E.g. "This is an English sentence", "This sentence has five words", etc. For your solution, it seems to generate another Liar, e.g. — MindForged
How is it not in the realm of a deductive truth? — MindForged
And besides which, isn't your solution subject to the same revenge, e.g.
"This sentence is meaningless"
I don't think meaninglessness is really truth predication, so it seems immune to that objection. But it obviously just generates the paradox again since that new Liar is meaningless, and because it says of itself that it's meaningless, it's also true. — MindForged
From what axioms and definitions can one derive "this sentence is false"? Can you set out the proof that concludes with the liar sentence?
I don't understand how this relates to the liar paradox. "this sentence is false" and "this sentence is meaningless" are two different sentences. I'm saying that the former cannot have a truth value because it having a truth value doesn't mean anything. I'm not saying anything about the latter. It, too, might be a problematic sentence, but there's no prima facie reason to believe that a solution to one must also be a solution to the other.
The point is if your solution works for "This sentence is false" then it should dispel "This sentence is meaningless" — MindForged
Why? They're different sentences.
The T-schema defines T(x) as x. The liar paradox defines x as ¬T(x). These are contradictory definitions.
Because it's the same type of paradox caused by the same feature. — MindForged
No, T-schema defines a true proposition as being such just if x is the case. It's not defining itself as a contradiction, it's deriving a contradiction by taking the "capture and release" rules and other basic principles and applying them to a proposition that asserts its own falsity. This isn't the only way to run the argument, but here it is again: — MindForged
There's nothing about the liar which is any different than any other self-referential sentence. — MindForged
I think it's simply about negative self reference. The negative makes it problematical. Otherwise it would be just circular and then perhaps meaningless.This issue isn't with self-reference but self-referential truth predication (without some further addition, like "this sentence is written in English and is true"). It's meaningless. — Michael
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.