But, ''this'' isn't like ''I''. If we stay true to the definition of the word then ''this'' doesn't apply to itself and it should for the liar paradox to be one.
Of course we could invent a self-referential word e.g. ''thes'' and define it as such and the paradox would appear.
If one were to be as exact as possible the definition of ''this'' doesn't include self-reference. It is grammatically incorrect (I'm not a linguistic expert).
However, people do use ''this'' as you have (''this Australian needs a bath'' :D) but note that such forms of language are classified as referring to oneself in the third person. It isn't completely an instance of self-reference. People would find it odd to hear someone refer to himself in the third person.
So, I still think the liar sentence is grammatically incorrect.
However, as I mentioned above we could invent a self-referential word like ''thes'' and the liar paradox still is a problem. — TheMadFool
That seems false. Just take the Liar and it gives you a grounded truth value to start with (namely falsity). — MindForged
I have a gut feeling the liar paradox is important. It must mean something. I just don't know what it is. — TheMadFool
Hah, it's not that simple but I confess I find the view persuasive.Thanks. Dialetheism it is then.
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.
I was going to check the proof to see if that premise is actually used, but I got tired and didn't, so I'm hoping maybe somebody else did. It would be unusual to state a premise that was not used though.
Tarski proved a stronger theorem than the one stated above, using an entirely syntactical method. The resulting theorem applies to any formal language with negation, and with sufficient capability for self-reference that the diagonal lemma holds. First-order arithmetic satisfies these preconditions, but the theorem applies to much more general formal systems.
Yes, but it doesn't ever give you a grounded truth-apt subject. To determine the truth of the liar sentence first requires determining the truth of the subject ("This sentence"). That requires substitution with the original liar sentence and so on ad infinitum. There is no final truth-apt subject to ground the liar sentence.
So the liar sentence fails to assert anything about a truth-apt subject and so isn't itself truth-apt. If you disagree, then what do you think is being asserted?
I took the T-schema and so said that "True(x)" has the same truth-value as just asserting that "x". — MindForged
The T-schema is an attempt to define truth. What do we mean when we say that a sentence is true? To say that "'T' is true" is true if "T" is true, which you are claiming is what the T-schema is saying, doesn't answer this question.
I took the T-schema and so said that "True(x)" has the same truth-value as just asserting that "x".
But take a sentence like "this sentence is true". We can use the T-schema to say that "'this sentence is true' is true" means "this sentence is true", but what does "this sentence is true" mean? Unlike "it is raining", we can't refer to some empirical state of affairs. The "is true" in "this sentence is true" isn't saying anything. Just as the "is false" in "this sentence is false" isn't saying anything. Truth-predication in these cases is a category error.
"This sentence is true" under the T-schema would be logically equivalent to saying the sentence is the case: True(x) <=> x — MindForged
Um, that's not what I said, even in your quote of me. — MindForged
You said that "True(x)" and "x" have the same truth value. I assume "True(x)" means "'x' is true"? So "'x' is true" and "x" have the same truth value. Which means that "'x' is true" is true iff "x" is true.
But the T-schema is saying more than this. It's trying to explain what it means to have a truth-value.
That quote is from a different article (this one), and what it refers to as 'the one stated above' is not the Diagonal Lemma.Tarski proved a stronger theorem than the one stated above, using an entirely syntactical method. The resulting theorem applies to any formal language with negation, and with sufficient capability for self-reference that the diagonal lemma holds. First-order arithmetic satisfies these preconditions, but the theorem applies to much more general formal systems. — Wiki
An interpreted language is strongly-semantically-self-representational exactly when the language contains predicates and function symbols defining all the semantic concepts specific to the language. Hence the required functions include the "semantic valuation function" mapping a formula A to its truth value ||A||, and the "semantic denotation function" mapping a term t to the object it denotes. Tarski's theorem then generalizes as follows:No sufficiently powerful language is strongly-semantically-self-representational. — wiki
The same for the Liar under the T-schema. The sentence "This sentence is false (or untrue)" is logically equivalent (same truth-value) to the previous is the case: ~True(x) <=> x — MindForged
In particular it gives an unwanted air of correspondence to Tarski's schema. — Banno
We should like our definition to do justice to the intuitions which adhere to the classical Aristotelian conception of truth-intuitions which find their expression in the well-known words of Aristotle's Metaphysics:
To say of what is that it is not, or of what is not that it is, is false, while to say of what is that it is, or of what is not that it is not, is true.
If we wished to adapt ourselves to modern philosophical terminology, we could perhaps express this conception by means of the familiar formula:
The truth of a sentence consists in its agreement with (or correspondence to) reality.
(For a theory of truth which is to be based upon the latter formulation the
term "correspondence theory'' has been suggested.)
If, on the other hand, we should decide to extend the popular usage of the term "designate" by applying it not only to names, but also to sentences, and if we agreed to speak of the designate of sentences as "states of affairs," we could possibly use for the same purpose the following phrase:
A sentence is true if it designates an existing state of affairs.
I was by no means surprised to learn (in a discussion devoted to these problems) that in a group of people who were questioned only 15% agreed that "true" means for them "agreeing with reality," while 90% agreed that a sentence such as "it is snowing" is true if, and only if, it is snowing. Thus, a great majority of these people seemed to reject the classical conception of truth in its "philosophical" formulation, while accepting the same conception [my emphasis] when formulated in plain words.
That's just assuming the Kripke's solution and it fails for the same reason. — MindForged
This notion of groundedness can be just as easily used to restate the paradox:
This sentence is ungrounded. — MindForged
I think Kripke grants that the liar sentence is a meaningful assertion but that it just lacks a truth value (and so therefore has some third value). Whereas I am claiming that the liar sentence isn't a meaningful assertion at all because it fails to meet the logical criteria for one. A bit like the sentence "the tree is false".
That sentence fails for the same reason as the liar sentence. We can all agree that that sentence is ungrounded. But, being ungrounded, the sentence itself doesn't meet the logical criteria required for a meaningful assertion. So you can't then treat it as if it does.
That is, the sentence appears to be asserting something about itself. But it is not, despite surface appearances. Whereas our assertions about the sentence are truth-apt as long as we're not asserting that the sentence is true or false.
That is the sense in which the liar, truth-teller and revenge paradoxes are like a mirage. There appears to be water there, and it makes us think about water, but appearances are sometimes deceiving. There's no water there.
And that comparison seems disanalogous. Trees don't even have the appearance of a truth-apt object, whereas even you seem to agree that the Liars at least appear as if they are truth-apt. — MindForged
No no, the notion of groundedness refers to, essentially, hacking off the truth-predicate. The predicate "is grounded" (and its negation) aren't truth predicates so it's not subject to the same criticism — MindForged
unless you are arguing that self-reference is itself not an allowed thing to do in language. — MindForged
If you agree the sentence is ungrounded, that entails that it is true, which contradicts being ungrounded. — MindForged
The liar sentence shows that not all sentences that appear to meaningfully assert something actually do so. It's the linguistic equivalent of a mirage. — Andrew M
The liar sentence is perfectly grammatical. — Dawnstorm
Why is the mirage there in the first place? — TheMadFool
I'll accept that because ''this'' may be defined to self-refer. — TheMadFool
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.