(or vice versa)Yes, "no". — Jack
You ask someone (we'll call him "Jack") to give a truthful
> yes/no answer to the following question... — PL Olcott
Then the question is an incorrect question when posed to Jack — PL Olcott
I changed the words to the better words of the PhD computer science professor. — PL Olcott
Can Carol correctly answer “no” to this question?
Let's ask Carol. If she says “yes”, she's saying that “no” is the correct answer for her, so “yes” is incorrect. If she says “no”, she's saying that she cannot correctly answer “no”, which is her answer. So both answers are incorrect. Carol cannot answer the question correctly.
Because:
(1) Both "yes" and "no" are the wrong answer from Carol. — PL Olcott
Can Carol correctly answer 'no' to this question? There is a true possibility that Carol could do so. — javi2541997
Carol cannot correctly answer her question yet when she says "no" then she has correctly answered her question making "no" the wrong answer.
When Carol says "yes" this means that she can correctly answer her question with "no" yet we just proved that is incorrect. — PL Olcott
What I do not understand is why you consider the question as 'wrong' when we are debating whether Carol is capable of answering the question correctly. — javi2541997
What I do not understand is why you consider the question as 'wrong' when we are debating whether Carol is capable of answering the question correctly. — javi2541997
If I ask you how many feet long is the color of your car? no one can provide a correct answer because the question itself is incorrect. The same thing happens when a self-contradictory question is asked. — PL Olcott
One thing that I found in my 20 year long quest is that self-contradictory expressions are not true. As a corollary to this self-contradictory questions are incorrect. — PL Olcott
I still do not see the correlation between 'yes/no' - or 'correct/incorrect' - and true and false. — javi2541997
An incorrect yes/no (technically polar) question is any yes/no question lacking a correct answer from the set of {yes, no} or {true, false} — PL Olcott
Correct/incorrect are not related to the truth or false in your question to Carol. — javi2541997
I assume of course that "who" refers to a person. But does a person have a context?Linguistics understands that the context of who is asked a question does change the meaning of some questions ... When the context of who is asked a question determines ... — PL Olcott
1) A question cannot have a correct answer. What can be correct is the answer given to that question. So maybe you mean that the question can receive a correct answer?When the context of who is asked a question determines whether or not a question has a correct answer then this context can never be correctly ignored. — PL Olcott
1) A question cannot have a correct answer. — Alkis Piskas
My intention is not to criticize you, but to pinpoint important elements in a philosophical discussion. And I'm addressed to the general public, because I see the phenomenon of lack of clarity and misuse of terms only too often. — Alkis Piskas
Since both yes and no are an incorrect answer from Carol this conclusively proves that Carol's question meets the stipulated definition of an incorrect question when posed to Carol. — PL Olcott
By extension, all this applies and is an answer to your topic itself: If the context in which a question is asked is mission or not clear, of course this question might receive not incorrect, but inappropriate answers, i.e. answers "out of context" or "off-topic", as we use to say. A classic example is an ambiguous question that can be answered with both "Yes" and "No", about which you talked in your description. — Alkis Piskas
Yet again, I claim that the 'incorrect' question doesn't depend whether is posed on Carol or not. — javi2541997
By extension, all this applies and is an answer to your topic itself: If the context in which a question is asked is mission or not clear, of course this question might receive not incorrect, but inappropriate answers, i.e. answers "out of context" or "off-topic", as we use to say. A classic example is an ambiguous question that can be answered with both "Yes" and "No", about which you talked in your description. — Alkis Piskas
(c) No answer is not a correct answer from Carol.
We have exhaustively examined every possibility and thus proven every action taken by Carol does not result in a correct answer. — PL Olcott
No, it is wrong to say that a question has a correct answer. It is wrong even to say that a question has any answer at all. A question is asked by a person and is addressed to anor person or persons in order to receive, to be given an answer. And then, the answer does not go to the question, it does not become a property of the question; it goes to whom asked the question."Is the living mammal of an elephant any type of fifteen story office building?"
has the correct answer of "no". — PL Olcott
This is a known self-contraditory statement. It cannot be answered (with "true" or "false"). That's all.Is the following sentence true or false: "This sentence is not true."
has no correct answer from the set of {true, false}. — PL Olcott
I appreciate this. I hope I have contributed in some way,My purpose of being here is to get feedback so that I can make my words clear enough so that they can be understood as correct. — PL Olcott
I wouldn't state it like that myself, but I agree. :smile:When a decision problem decider/input pair lacks a correct Boolean return value from this decider then this decision problem instance is semantically unsound. — PL Olcott
Well, depending on the question-statement, I would rather say ambiguous or circular or self-contradictory or --if it refers to an argument-- a fallacious argument.When the solution set is restricted to {yes, no} and no element of this solution set is a correct answer from Carol then the question posed to Carol is incorrect. — PL Olcott
"Is the living mammal of an elephant any type of fifteen story office building?"
has the correct answer of "no".
— PL Olcott
No, it is wrong to say that a question has a correct answer. — Alkis Piskas
When a decision problem decider/input pair lacks a correct Boolean return value from this decider then this decision problem instance is semantically unsound.
— PL Olcott
I wouldn't state it like that myself, but I agree. :smile: — Alkis Piskas
Well, depending on the question-statement, I would rather say ambiguous or circular or self-contradictory or --if it refers to an argument-- a fallacious argument. — Alkis Piskas
You are not wrong. And I think you do have a clue, and a correct one. @PL Olcott is simply confused. Besides being rude.But maybe I am wrong, and I don't have a clue about what is going on. :smile: — javi2541997
Let me think about this deeply. Maybe I can come back with more substantive comments, and see other possibilities. I appreciate how you considered each feasible scenario of Carol's behaviour. I still believe that there can be a possible correct answer. — javi2541997
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