You have at least two inferences here. — Kornelius
I do not understand your point — Srap Tasmaner
Also, '... is meaningful' feels like a weasel-predicate. That is, '... is meaningful' deliberately avoids asking, for instance, 'What does it mean?' or 'What does it say?' Ask an average person about the Liar, and you can expect them to reply, 'Well that's stupid. It doesn't say anything.' — Srap Tasmaner
Since I don't see any problems in the argument I presented, it follows that your objection must revolve around L and P. — TheMadFool
But then what about this one?
(L'') 'This sentence is not true or is not a proposition.'
If it's true, it's either not true or it's not a proposition, so it's not a proposition, so it can't be true. If it's not true, it's true and a proposition. — Srap Tasmaner
What to do when it comes to natural languages -- there's the rub. — Srap Tasmaner
Thoughts? — Kornelius
1. Assume (Li) is true
2. Then '(Li) is not true' is true (substitution).
3. Then (Li) is not true (T-out)
4. Then (Li) is true and (Li) is not true (from 1 and 3. Contradiction)
5. Then (Li) is not true (reductio 1-4)
6. Then '(Li) is not true' is true (T-in)
7. Then (Li) is true (substitution)
8. Then (Li) is true and (Li) is not true (from 5 and 7. Contradiction). — Kornelius
It is only once we trace the logical implications that we realize that something is wrong, but in order to be able to do that, didn't we have to first understand what the sentence is saying? — SophistiCat
I want to follow this but I can't. — Srap Tasmaner
On the other hand, the Liar is introduced as a premise, but then behaves like an inference rule. ('Given me, you may introduce not-me.') You have to understand the inference rule to use it, that is true. But that's understanding-how, not understanding-that. Inference rules are deliberately empty, have no 'that' content. They don't say anything themselves; it's premises that actually say stuff. — Srap Tasmaner
Anyway, for the assumption angle, I was trying to think of something like that principle -- the name escapes me, has to do with entropy -- that there are always more ways of being wrong than right. Not exactly that, but something like it. A justification for assuming that a sentence, even a grammatical sentence, is nonsense until it is demonstrated that you can assign a truth value to it. — Srap Tasmaner
How does Scharp use these to solve the paradox? — Banno
What blocks:
9. (Li) is not true (8, truth conditions of conjunction).
?
Why can't it just be false? — fdrake
For this reason, we cannot simply conclude that (Li) is not true, since we can conclude (Li) is true and, in fact, any proposition we wish. — Kornelius
But I am thinking this explanation may not be satisfactory. Did you have something else in mind? — Kornelius
Something like this; if you conclude that it's true and false, the conjunction of a truth and a falsehood is a false, so it's false. IE, it appears to be an instance of "X and not-X". — fdrake
I do think you are right in pressing against the view I was arguing here, namely that we should assume it is meaningful. — Kornelius
Since liar sentences can be formed in natural languages, then the linguist must provide a semantics for these sentences (on the assumption they are meaningful). But we cannot give such a semantics for such sentences, despite their being meaningful. This is a reason we need an alternative to the concept. — Kornelius
Small point: relativistic mass a convenient fiction; there's only rest mass, here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LTJauaefTZM — tim wood
↪Neb Flattery will get you nowhere, alas. I have no idea. But the Fermilab videos with Don Lincoln seem to have the mark of truth to them. I'd venture a guess, but I know the subject is too tricky for guesses. What I get, though, is that the mass does not change, and is always the rest mass. I think he offer lins to other videos that expand on this. — tim wood
What we have is [(Li) is true and (Li) is not true] is not true.
Agreed. But by what rule of inference would it follow that (Li) is not true? — Kornelius
It's simply a case of my suggestion not being very good! — fdrake
The usual one: if P entails a contradiction, P is false.* If you want, you could say the problem is that both the Liar and its negation are false, which in turn violates the LEM. — Srap Tasmaner
* It's not uncommon to just define ¬P¬P as P→⊥P→⊥. Even in systems that don't, this is an introduction rule for ¬¬. — Srap Tasmaner
But notice that the rule you mention here doesn't get us from [(Li) is true and (Li) is not true] is false to (Li) is not true. If a conjunction is false, either of its conjuncts could be false, so the inference here is invalid. — Kornelius
1. Assume (Li) is true
2. Then '(Li) is not true' is true (substitution).
3. Then (Li) is not true (T-out)
4. Then (Li) is true and (Li) is not true (from 1 and 3. Contradiction)
5. Then (Li) is not true (reductio 1-4) — Kornelius
5. Then (Li) is not true (reductio 1-4)
6. Then '(Li) is not true' is true (T-in)
7. Then (Li) is true (substitution)
8. Then (Li) is true and (Li) is not true (from 5 and 7. Contradiction). — Kornelius
Since there was only one premise... — Srap Tasmaner
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