A crocodile takes a child but promise the parent he will return the child if the parent guesses what the crocodile will do. The parent responds that the crocodile will not give the child back.
What does the crocodile do in response? How would the crocodile get around this using an alternate form of logic? — Marchesk
With math and logic it's a matter of using the axioms and the rules of inference to determine what follows from what.
There's nothing like either of that for liar-like statements. — Michael
I don't know how you can say that. The contradiction in the liar statement stems from following the rules of logic. If not, then why is it considered an issue? — Marchesk
The Liar sentence is not of the form 'L and not-L', and attempts to derive a sentence of that form from the Liar sentence make untenable assumptions. — andrewk
The third one is the "strengthened" liar paradox. Consider:
"This sentence does not express a true proposition."
If it's true, then you're back at the same contradiction. — Marchesk
It's not true. The sentence isn't truth-apt.
It really is a straightforward proof by contradiction. If it being either true or false leads to a contradiction then it must be neither true nor false. — Michael
But you can't get out of it by stating that if it leads to another statement resulting in contradiction. — Marchesk
But we do say things like that on occasion. For example, "This party is not a party", meaning it's a party in name only. I'm pretty sure I have said something akin to "this chair is not a chair" when being forced to sit on something uncomfortable that served as a chair. I've also said, "I'm not myself today", which would seem to be a violation of the law of identity, but clearly it's not meant to be taken in literal terms. — Marchesk
Also, there is this very big counter to the claim that the liar sentence is without meaning:
"This sentence is meaningless."
Which would be true if the liar sentence is meaningless, but then we get ourselves into another regress. — Marchesk
"This sentence is not in Italian", which is not meaningless, but is in the same form as the liar sentence. — Marchesk
"This sentence is meaningless."
Which would be true if the liar sentence is meaningless, — Marchesk
At any rate, if someone assigns no meaning to that sentence, then "This sentence is meaningless" is simply true. — Terrapin Station
If the sentence is meaningless, then it can't be true. — Marchesk
If the sentence is meaningless, then it can't be true. — Marchesk
I agree, we do use it, and I should have included the word 'necessarily' in that sentence you quoted ('does not necessarily a contradiction make ....'). But my understanding of what it means for a natural language sentence to contain a contradiction is that it is equivalent* to a formal sentence that contains one.
I have never seen any other definition of contradiction that is sufficiently objective to enable one to determine in all cases whether the definition is satisfied.
* 'equivalent' in the sense that the user of the sentence would not object to the translation as inaccurate, if the meaning of the translated sentence were explained to them. — andrewk
It's not a contradiction unless one can set the contradiction out as a deduction in a formal logical language. And my point is that, in the process of trying to do that, one encounters obstacles that lead one to realise that there is no contradiction there. There's a bunch of nuances to this that I've left out for the sake of brevity. But we cannot even begin to consider them until somebody makes the attempt to formalise the sentence.
A bunch of natural language words does not a contradiction make, no matter how much it may feel as though they do. — andrewk
The idea here is simple. If giving the LP either the value of "true" or the value of "false" results in an inescapable contradiction, we can avoid the Paradox by saying that the LP has neither value, thus preventing the contradiction. There are many arguable problems here. Firstly, this would seem to require abandoning the Law of the Excluded Middle or else the Principle of Bivalence. Now, I've no qualms with dropping Classical Logic in favor of a Non-Classical Logic, but I get the feeling many people would not like that. — MindForged
Do we have to abandon classical logic when we claim that the sentence "go away" is neither true nor false? — Michael
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