Consider the ordinary statement, made by Jones:
(1) Most (i.e., a majority) of Nixon's assertions about Watergate are false. Clearly, nothing is intrinsically wrong with (I), nor is it ill-formed. Ordinarily the truth value of (1) will be ascertainable through an enumeration of Nixon's Watergate-related assertions, and an assessment of each for truth or falsity. Suppose, however, that Nixon's assertions about Watergate are evenly balanced between the true and the false, except for one problematic case,
(2) Everything Jones says about Watergate is true. Suppose, in addition, that (1) is Jones's sole
assertion about Watergate, or alternatively, that all his Watergate-related assertions except perhaps (1) are true. Then it requires little expertise to show that (1) and (2) are both paradoxical: they are true if and only if they are false. — Saul A. Kripke, “Outline of a Theory of Truth,” Journal of Philosophy 72 (19):690-716 (1975)
Cannot be assigned? That seems a stretch.So, the fundamental error here is assuming that truth and falsity can be assigned to statements which can't be cashed out existentially. — Dfpolis
Cannot be assigned? That seems a stretch. — tim wood
It is not clear to me that truth or falsity is ever assigned to any statements — tim wood
I'm having trouble with Kripke's paradox. — tim wood
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