It strikes me as casual barstool "philosophy" with no definitive answer that's likely to invite a lot of attempts at humour rather than being a serious philosophical issue that you're puzzled about.
But if I'm wrong and it develops in an unexpectedly positive direction, I'll move it back — Baden
Does the following sentence...:
"I love you more than words can say."
... express its meaning? — Wallows
Sentences don't literally "express meaning," you assign meaning to them. — Terrapin Station
What part of the sentence might you take to be referring to the sentence itself? — Terrapin Station
Not words in general? — Terrapin Station
Well, sure, those are words, too. So then you'd say that any sentence about language, words in general is self-referential? — Terrapin Station
"Linguistics is the scientific study of language" for example. — Terrapin Station
No, because it is a statement of inequality, just like saying - 'I am taller than that anthill'. If it were a statement of equality it might be self-referential.Is it self-referential? — Wallows
It doesn't appear to be self-referential in the same manner that "I love you more than words can say." — Wallows
So then simply referring to language or words when there are language or words in the sentence probably isn't sufficient for something to be self-referential — Terrapin Station
Is that self-referential? — Terrapin Station
Why would ambiguity/vagueness have something to do with self-referentiality, though? — Terrapin Station
The love sentence is similar to the Commdore 64 sentence. They're both saying that the medium at hand isn't capable of doing the job we'd like for it to be able to do. — Terrapin Station
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