Which is what? Certainly not self-reference because, as you mention, there are self-referential sentences which don't pose a problem. Something else about the liar paradox (in conjunction with self-reference) causes the problem, but it isn't a given that this "something else" is the same thing for both "this sentence is false" and "this sentence is meaningless" (or "this sentence is either false or meaningless.").
I'm not saying that the T-schema defines itself as a contradiction. I'm saying that the T-schema defines T(x) as x and that this definition of T(x) is inconsistent with the liar paradox's definition of x as ¬T(x).
The T-schema defines T(x) as x. The liar paradox defines x as ¬T(x). These are contradictory definitions.
It can't both be the case that T(x) means x and that x means ¬T(x).
But truth (and falsity) is just another predicate, — MindForged
So T(x) ≔ x and x ≔ ¬T(x). Therefore, T(x) ≔ ¬T(x). Your definitions are contradictory.
I agree. It is not the self-reference alone that is the problem.Certainly not self-reference because, as you mention, there are self-referential sentences which don't pose a problem. Something else about the liar paradox (in conjunction with self-reference) causes the problem, but it isn't a given that this "something else" is the same thing for both "this sentence is false" and "this sentence is meaningless" (or "this sentence is either false or meaningless."). — Michael
1) True(L) ∨ ¬True(L) (Excluded Middle)
2) True(L)
3) L (release)
4) ¬True(L) (definition of L)
5) ¬True(L) ∧ True(L) (adjunction) — MindForged
That's why sentences like 'This sentence is written in English' or 'This sentence has ten words' are not viciously circular. They are self-referential but the reference is to the sentence's syntax, not to its semantics (meaning). So one needs to only observe the sentence's syntax, not its semantics, before one works out its semantics. — andrewk
...T-schema leading to a true contradiction... — MindForged
The liar sentence, as usually given, isThe liar isn't "False is false". — MindForged
I think all you're really doing is denying the possibility of self-reference, because the Liar is constructed within a semantically closed language — MindForged
I'm afraid I don't know what you are referring to with the words 'the Liar'. And also, I'm afraid I can't make anything of your first sentence. In my understanding, a sentence does not have a referent, it is names or symbols that have referents.If you are being "excruciatingly literal minded" then you wouldn't substitute the truth value in for the referent of the sentence. The truth-value is part of the sentence that's being referred to, that's the Liar. — MindForged
The Liar Paradox = L = This sentence is false.
How do we make sense of this paradox? — TheMadFool
I had assumed we were discussing within that context, along with the inconsistencies and explosions that inevitably flow from that. Why do you think that involves denying the possibility of self-reference? My expansion of the sentence to the more formal version above is following how Russell expands 'The present king of France is bald' in his theory of definite descriptions, not seeking to forbid self-reference. The aim is to make explicit the implicit assertions hidden within a definite description.
The fact that my expanded sentence still contains the word 'this sentence' should be sufficient to demonstrate that the operation did not banish self-reference.
'there exists x that is the truth value of this sentence and x = False'
I'm afraid I don't know what you are referring to with the words 'the Liar'. And also, I'm afraid I can't make anything of your first sentence. In my understanding, a sentence does not have a referent, it is names or symbols that have referents.
TheMadFool — TheMadFool
The only agreement among logicians seems to be that no one has a proper solution yet, so if there is a solution it must be a strange one because all the obvious responses have been tried and they failed (e.g. Kripke's solution doesn't work, Tarski's infinite hierarchy of metalanguages doesn't work, etc.) — MindForged
So it fails to state anything, not even a contradiction. — Andrew M
Are you sure it can do that validly? The linked page states the lemma with a premise that restricts it to first-order languages, which I expect would rule out its use in a T-schema environment which I believe is higher order.The T-schema for instance uses the diagonal lemma and so can produce the Liar. — MindForged
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