No, what we're saying is that A. "this sentence is false" and B. "this sentence is neither true nor false" are not logically equivalent — Michael
Logical equivalence of two given statements means that the given statements must have the same truth value in all possible worlds.
I've shown you how ''This statement is false'' and ''This statement is neither true nor false'' have the same truth value as in
1. They cannot be true
2. They cannot be false
3. They cannot be both true and false
However both can be 4.Neither true nor false. Doesn't that establish logical equivalence? — TheMadFool
Consider the sentences "how old are you?" and "what is your name?". Both are neither true nor false but they are not logically equivalent. For two sentences to be logically equivalent it must be that iff one is true then the other is true and iff one is false then the other is false. It isn't a term that is applicable to sentences that are not truth-apt — Michael
In symbolic logic, we say that two well-formed sentences, call them A1 and A2, are logically equivalent iff A1--> A2 and A2-->A1.However both can be 4.Neither true nor false. Doesn't that establish logical equivalence? — TheMadFool
With my definition of logical equivalence, that is not the case. Neither sentence is logically equivalent to anything.In logic we have no way of distinguishing ''what is yor name?'' from ''how old are you?'' These two are the same so far as logic is concerned. Likewise logic can't find a difference between ''this statement is false'' and ''this statement is neither true nor false''. Therefore they are logically equivalent. — TheMadFool
Under this definition, questions, commands, expletives and meaningless sentences cannot be logically equivalent to anything because they are not equivalent to any well-formed sentence in FOPL — andrewk
If I can't distinguish the difference between A and B, then it can be inferred that A and B are the equivalent. — TheMadFool
It can't be inferred, but it can be stipulated, ie: defined to the case. You are free to adopt that definition of 'equivalent' if you wish. Is it a useful definition though? Where does it get you that you couldn't get to otherwise?If I can't distinguish the difference between A and B, then it can be inferred that A and B are the equivalent. — TheMadFool
If you can't distinguish between the two statements then you're probably dyslexic. — Benkei
Logic can't differentiate ''this statement is false'' from ''this statement is neither true nor false''. Therefore, they are equivalent — TheMadFool
Logic can't differentiate ''this statement is false'' from ''this statement is neither true nor false''. Therefore, they are equivalent — TheMadFool
Is it a useful definition though? Where does it get you that you couldn't get to otherwise? — andrewk
What then is this statement ''this statement is neither true nor false''? — TheMadFool
4. Neither true nor false...this is not possible (refer to 1) — TheMadFool
1. There's a book on the table
2. There's a book on the table is true — TheMadFool
However take the following statement:
''This sentence has five words''. — TheMadFool
How do you reach that conclusion? It doesn't look reachable to me.First note that
A: this statement is false
B: this statement is neither true nor false
For A the truth-value is indeterminate and we end up concluding B. — TheMadFool
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