Yes, see the first reply to this discussion. ;)
Yes, it's true if it's false. But what does it mean for it to be true? Are you saying that it being true means that it's false (and vice versa)? So in the context of the liar paradox, "true" and "false" mean the same thing? If so then a) there is no contradiction and b) the terms "true" and "false" in the context of the liar paradox mean something other than what they mean in ordinary usage. And then you still need to explain what it actually means for the sentence to be true/false.
Not necessarily. All we can say is 'it feels as though it ought to follow that it is false'. In order to convert that into an unqualified statement like 'it follows that it is false', we need to translate the statement into a formal logical proposition, since we can only make definite statements about those. But it's in the attempt to make that translation that we hit obstacles.If that Liar Sentence is true, then it follows that it is also false — MindForged
The evidence is the straightforward proof by contradiction. That the Liar sentence is not truth-apt is a readily established fact. Now, you may wonder what makes it so, but that's a different — SophistiCat
It sounds like you think there is a representation of the sentence in a formal logical language. I would be very surprised to see such a thing, and suspect that it either lacks in formality or doesn't sufficiently represent what people feel the natural language version says.
Post the representation, with details of the formal language being used, and we can discuss it.
To say that it's true merely means that the proposition is related to (in the mathematical sense) the value "true", and to say it's false simply means it is related to the value "false". — MindForged
If you're asking for a theory of truth, that is a discussion independent of logical formalisms. Formal logic is, generally speaking, neutral as to the meaning of those predicates (that's why there are a number of theories of truth).
If we're working in, say, Classical Logic, all propositions must have a truth-value they relate to, and that value must be either "truth" or "falsity". So unless you can show specifically how the LPs aren't propositions, there's really nowhere to go. You either have to reject Classical Logic or just accept the paradox.
If the only problem is that the sentence feels unintuitive, and the things one feels like one ought to be able to deduce from it feel as though they would contradict one another, then that's not a problem of psychology, not of symbolic logic. — andrewk
It's not a contradiction unless one can set the contradiction out as a deduction in a formal logical language. — andrewk
A bunch of natural language words does not a contradiction make, no matter how much it may feel as though they do. — andrewk
"I am lying" is a self-referential sentence which leads to a rather problematic situation. If the statement is true, then it is false. If it is true, then it is false. But instead of using "I am lying" as the problem statement, we should use its strengthened version which is "This sentence is not true."
Where does its complications lies? Is it about truth? about reference? or a problem as a proposition? What do you think? — Jaydison
They function similarly to transitive verbs without objects. — Terrapin Station
"this chair is not a chair", or "this table is not a table" — Metaphysician Undercover
Consider "this sentence is true". That doesn't say anything, as TS says, there's no substance. It's like saying 'this sentence is a sentence", "this chair is a chair", etc.. — Metaphysician Undercover
Post the representation, with details of the formal language being used, and we can discuss it. — andrewk
If we refrain from any or both the paradox disappears. — TheMadFool
Well, here's a clever way to remove the self reference and still end up with the liar's paradox:
Socrates: "What Plato is saying is false"
Plato: "What Socrates is saying is true" — Marchesk
However you are still using binary logic in your clever example — TheMadFool
I've never really understood the problem of the liar paradox, even after reading a little about it. Think of checking for truth like running a program, and a program can loop infinitely without output. Same with self-referential paradoxes. — The Great Whatever
Math and logic aren't grounded by the world. Also, there's fictional truths, such as Harry Potter performs magic. — Marchesk
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