This is probably hard to believe but I do not have the intuitions necessary to see the “mysteries” of some paradoxes. For example, the liar paradox “this sentence is false” simply appears meaningless to me and I do not enter the logic of: If 'This sentence is false.” is true, then since it is stating that the sentence is false, if it is actually true that would mean that it is false, and so on.
Language conveys information and I can’t extract relevant information from this sentence, this is why I do not understand why people manage to reason logically with it. — Skalidris
In general, if a sentence such as (1) asserts that (all, some, most, etc.) of the sentences of a certain class C are true, its truth value can be ascertained if the truth values of the sentences in the class C are ascertained. If some of these sentences themselves involve the notion of truth, their truth value in turn must be ascertained by looking at other sentences, and so on. If ultimately this process terminates in sentences not mentioning the concept of truth, so that the truth value of the original statement can be ascertained, we call the original sentence grounded; otherwise, ungrounded.
As a consequence, it is warranted to hold that logical principles may stand in need of revision on the basis of empirical findings, and even that logical principles (such as the PNC) have an empirical basis
Tahko considers it [the PNC] as ‘a fundamental metaphysical principle’ and ‘a true metaphysical principle concerning the world’
The author [Tahko] points out, first, that there are various interpretations of quantum mechanics, there being no consensus with respect to the question of what the right interpretation is, and, second, that it is not clear whether quantum mechanics is incompatible with the PNC
...
He maintains that even if it were granted that the truth of the PNC cannot be said to be observed on the microphysical level, that given would not detract from its manifestation on the macrophysical level, to which he refers as ‘the deep structure of the world’
Suppose one says: “This statement is pungent”. What is said is neither true nor not true, since smelling or tasting has nothing to do with the statement: it cannot be determined to be true or not true. Incidentally, the statement may in one sense of course be determined to be not true: the statement does not smell or taste like anything, so that it is not pungent.
The statement “This statement is not true” must refer to something (a state of affairs) in order to be able to determine that it is (not) true, but that complement is lacking. Since it is lacking and therefore not part of what is expressed, neither the truth nor its opposite is at issue.
“This statement is not true with respect to X”. In the latter case, there is no doubt what ‘X’ says. In the case of the liar paradox, conversely, ‘X’ has no content. The lack of content is problematic as it is a necessary condition for the truth (and falsity) to become apparent.
The lack of truth or falsity follows from the given that no statement is made, so that the issue of whether it may be true or not true does not present itself. This is a welcome outcome, since the alternative approach to ‘truth’ with respect to the liar paradox that consists in maintaining that a hierarchy of different levels of truth values exists appears difficult to uphold, as becomes apparent from Walker’s analysis
I have argued that the liar paradox is a paradox in name only. It has the potential to be a paradox, a potential that cannot be realized unless it is complemented with something on the basis of which its truth (and its opposite) is expressed.
Liar sentences are "ungrounded". Them being true or false isn't meaningful. — Michael
The first one is the sentence “The sun is yellow”, and the second one is “this sentence is false”. — Skalidris
Let's assume the correspondence theory of truth1: that a sentence is true is that it corresponds to a fact. We can use this to rephrase the liar sentence:
1. This sentence does not correspond to a fact.
We can also consider:
2. (3) corresponds to a fact.
3. (2) does not correspond to a fact.
Do (1), (2), and (3) each correspond to a fact?
1 Even if it's incorrect, the question above is worth considering. — Michael
If 'This sentence is false.” is true, then since it is stating that the sentence is false, if it is actually true that would mean that it is false, and so on.
Language conveys information and I can’t extract relevant information from this sentence, this is why I do not understand why people manage to reason logically with it. — Skalidris
The statement is unclear to be true or false. "This sentence" doesn't indicate which sentence it is describing or declaring about. From the statement, it is implied that there must another sentence before it, for the statement to be qualified to conclude "False", but it is not clear, whether it is the case, or "This sentence" means the sentence itself.For example, the liar paradox “this sentence is false” simply appears meaningless to me and I do not enter the logic of: If 'This sentence is false.” is true, then since it is stating that the sentence is false, if it is actually true that would mean that it is false, and so on. — Skalidris
The term "paradox" is overrated and abused. Most "paradoxes" are simply self-contradictory, self-refuting or circular statements or statements based on a false hypotheses. In short, invalid statements.For example, the liar paradox “this sentence is false” simply appears meaningless to me and I do not enter the logic ... — Skalidris
Its just a bad contraction. If we break out the sentence into its full meaning, its fine.
A. This is a sentence. True
B. The sentence in point A is a false sentence. False.
There ya go. — Philosophim
This sentence contains 36 characters
Should we break the above sentence into the below?
A. This is a sentence
B. The sentence in point A contains 36 characters — Michael
Except you can’t break it down that way because “This sentence contains 36 characters” is true but “The sentence in point A contains 36 characters” is false. — Michael
Most "paradoxes" are simply self-contradictory, self-refuting or circular statements or statements based on a false hypotheses. In short, invalid statements. — Alkis Piskas
Unfortunately, I'm not knowledgeable on the subject.the paradox is right there in the initial version of Principia Mathematica — Banno
What if you may already intuitively understand that the statement is lacking substance? — Vaskane
Therefore, if someone uttered the statement, it would beg the question, "Which sentence do you mean?" — Corvus
The term "paradox" is overrated and abused. Most "paradoxes" are simply self-contradictory, self-refuting or circular statements or statements based on a false hypotheses. — Alkis Piskas
There are such factors as perspective and relativity, which alone leave certain paradoxes "open" or "unsolvable". E.g. The Ship of Theseus paradox (thought experiment). — Alkis Piskas
An ambiguous statement disguised as a paradox.Yes, my reaction exactly. The most intriguing thing about this paradox is that a lot of people don't mind reasoning with something that is empty of meaning... Probably because they did not check that it actually has meaning prior entering this logic loop. — Skalidris
Right. That's why I added "thought experiment" in parentheses.The Ship of Theseus paradox looks more like a philosophical or linguistic issue than a paradox. — Skalidris
I think we can show this by considering the complement of a liar sentence:
1. This sentence is true
If (1) is true then there is no paradox. If (1) is not true then there is no paradox. But is (1) true or not true? — Michael
disagreed that a and 2 are equivalent — Brendan Golledge
When you used formal logic, you didnt prove that x is true — Brendan Golledge
or that x->y is true — Brendan Golledge
If A is false, then B is not false. Given the definition of the sentence you are using, A is false (or meaningless) and B is true. — Brendan Golledge
As for your formal logic, I think I am confused about whether you are asserting logic or truth. For instance, I cant tell whether you mean, "if X is true, then Y is true" (I agree with this logic) or "X IS true, and therefore Y is true" (I disagree with this because I think X is either false or meaningless). — Brendan Golledge
1. X := (X → Y)
2. X → X
3. X → (X → Y)
4. X → Y (from 3 by contraction)
5. X (substitute 4 by 1)
6. Y (from 4 and 5) — Michael
1. X means that if X is true then Y is true (definition)
2. If X is true then X is true (law of identity)
3. If X is true then if X is true then Y is true is true (switch in the definition of X given in (1))
4. If X is true then Y is true (from 3 by contraction)
5. X is true (switch out the definition of X given in (1))
6. Y (from 4 and 5) — Michael
A) if this sentence is true then Germany borders China
B) if (A) is true then Germany borders China — Michael
If A is false, then B is not false. Given the definition of the sentence you are using, A is false (or meaningless) and B is true.
"A" is not the same as B: "if A is true, then the statement given by A is true". B as written here is true regardless of the truth value of A. I could just as well write, A: "The sky is pink" and B: "if A is true, then the sky is pink". This A is false and this B is true. — Brendan Golledge
"A" is not the same as B: "if A is true, then the statement given by A is true". B as written here is true regardless of the truth value of A. I could just as well write, A: "The sky is pink" and B: "if A is true, then the sky is pink". This A is false and this B is true. — Brendan Golledge
But the paper went on further to prove that if 6 is false, then 1 must also be false. So, it is a bad definition. — Brendan Golledge
You can also do a truth table of X, Y, and X -> Y and see that X <-> (X -> Y) is false. — Brendan Golledge
Is this statement false? If I've done the truth table right, then it means that the first line of the proof is wrong. — Brendan Golledge
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