There is a unique sentence that predicates truth of itself, and is true.
And what would you do differently as a result of "This sentence is true"?
It is also, presumably, meaningless? — Banno
The prosentential theory also throws out 'This sentence is true', — Srap Tasmaner
One possible answer to this is ↪Janus
's: the problem is with self-reference. Self-reference is a meaningless construction. This is tempting, but, as I have pointed out in my first post in this thread, self-reference is built in our best syntactic and arithmetic theory. So unless we are also willing to throw out arithmetic, self-reference must be considered unimpeachable. But if it is not self-reference, then what is the culprit? — Nagase
Let us suppose you are right and the Liar is meaningless. This raises the question: why is it meaningless? Let us suppose, for definiteness, that the liar is "This sentence is not true". It is composed of meaningful parts meaningfully put together. That is, "This sentence", "is not" and "true" are each meaningful expressions and the sentence is grammatical. So why does it fail to be meaningful? — Nagase
I don't see what you think is true here. — Janus
Here you have two different sentences which are referring to each other; which seems to be just a more elaborate form of self-referentiality, so I don't see why the same would not apply as with the "Liar". — Janus
an entirely different matter. No empirical statement that happens to be true can be proven (in the deductive sense) to be true. How would you prove that water boils at 100 degrees C, for example? — Janus
I thought I was clear that the problem has nothing to do with self reference. Rather is because the sentence is incoherent - it makes no sense. — EricH
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