I do know that. It refers to itself, it contains five words, and so it doesn’t contain fifty words. — Michael
They are discussing the liar paradox. We are not discussing the liar paradox. We are discussing the sentences "this sentence contains five words" and "this sentence contains fifty words". — Michael
===============================================================================The Liar Paradox is an argument that arrives at a contradiction by reasoning about a Liar Sentence. The Classical Liar Sentence is the self-referential sentence: This sentence is false.
From the SEP article on self-reference:... self-reference is not a sufficient condition for paradoxicality. The truth-teller sentence “This sentence is true” is not paradoxical, and neither is the sentence “This sentence contains four words” (it is false, though) — Michael
Kripke proposes a solution in the following manner. If a statement's truth value is ultimately tied up in some evaluable fact about the world, that statement is "grounded". If not, that statement is "ungrounded". Ungrounded statements do not have a truth value. Liar statements and liar-like statements are ungrounded, and therefore have no truth value.
"this sentence contains five words" is grounded and is true.
"this sentence contains fifty words" is grounded and is false.
"this sentence is false" is ungrounded and is neither true nor false. — Michael
I do know that. It refers to itself, it contains five words, and so it doesn’t contain fifty words. — Michael
My question is, if the expression "this sentence" within "this sentence contains fifty words" is referring to itself, ie referring to "this sentence contains fifty words", then how can there be any grounding in the world? — RussellA
It's grounded in that we can count how many words are in the sentence "this sentence contains fifty words". There are five words, not fifty, and so the sentence is false. — Michael
All I'm trying to say is that an expression that self-refers cannot be grounded in the world — RussellA
The self-referential sentence "this sentence contains five words" is true because it contains five words.........................This is incredibly straightforward. — Michael
it is not correct to say that the sentence "this sentence contains five words" is true because it contains five words. — RussellA
"this sentence contains five words" is true IFF this sentence contains five words, not because the sentence "this sentence contains five words" contains five words. — RussellA
This sentence has five words. Not true? — TonesInDeepFreeze
Yes, true. — RussellA
The words "has" and "contain" have identical meaning in the context of this discussion. — EricH
Conclusion? "This sentence contains five words" is true. QED — EricH
Therefore, how can any one say that "this sentence contains five words" is true if no one knows which sentence is being referred to? — RussellA
In context we do know. — Michael
If you want to be explicit, then: The self-referential sentence "this sentence contains five words" is true. — Michael
Gottlob Frege was probably the first philosophical logician to express something very close to the idea that the predicate "is true" does not express anything above and beyond the statement to which it is attributed. In 1892, he wrote:
One can, indeed, say: "The thought that 5 is a prime number is true." But closer examination shows that nothing more has been said than in the simple sentence "5 is a prime number." The truth claim arises in each case from the form of the declarative sentence, and when the latter lacks its usual force, e.g., in the mouth of an actor upon the stage, even the sentence "The thought that 5 is a prime number is true" contains only a thought, and indeed the same thought as the simple "5 is a prime number."[1]
In 1918, he argued:
It is worthy of notice that the sentence "I smell the scent of violets" has the same content as the sentence "it is true that I smell the scent of violets". So it seems, then, that nothing is added to the thought by my ascribing to it the property of truth.[2][3]
Therefore, how can any one say that "this sentence contains five words" is true if no one knows which sentence is being referred to? — RussellA
"this sentence contains five words" is true IFF this sentence contains five words — RussellA
This sentence has five words. Not true? — TonesInDeepFreeze
Yes, true. — RussellA — EricH
Which sentence were you referring to when you made these statements? — EricH
The redundancy theory of truth usually applies to all sentences, whether it be "this sentence contains five words" or "it is raining". Seems strange to only apply it to self-referential sentences. — Michael
To say that "a horse is a horse" is true is saying no more than "a horse is a horse".
===============================================================================It is worthy of notice that the sentence "I smell the scent of violets" has the same content as the sentence "it is true that I smell the scent of violets". So it seems, then, that nothing is added to the thought by my ascribing to it the property of truth.
But even then, there's still nothing problematic with the sentence "this sentence contains five words". It is meaningful, despite your protestations to the contrary. — Michael
I maintain that barbers are people who shave people who are in the world.......................Therefore, if a barber tries to shave himself, there is an inherent contradiction. — bongo fury
It’s meaningful even when it’s referring to itself. — Michael
In philosophy—more specifically, in its sub-fields semantics, semiotics, philosophy of language, metaphysics, and metasemantics—meaning "is a relationship between two sorts of things: signs and the kinds of things they intend, express, or signify".
It’s really simple; the self-referential sentence “this sentence contains five words” is meaningful. I understand what it means, you understand what it means, and everyone else understands what it means. It’s not some foreign language or random combination of words. And we can count the words in the sentence to determine that it’s true. — Michael
Barbers cannot shave themselves.
I maintain that barbers are people who shave people who are in the world.
If they must be shaved, the barbers must visit other barbers. Shaving involves a correspondence between an ideal of cleanliness and the state of affairs on an actual face. Therefore, if a barber tries to shave himself, there is an inherent contradiction. — bongo fury
I maintain that barbers are people who shave people who are in the world.......................Therefore, if a barber tries to shave himself, there is an inherent contradiction. — bongo fury
Makes sense to me. I've never understood any validity in the barber paradox. — RussellA
The expression ‘secondary employment’, also commonly referred to as ‘double jobbing’, simply describes a situation where an employee takes on a second job.
During the day, someone works as an engineer in an engineering works. In order to pay their rent, during the evening they work in a cafe as a barista.
No one would call someone who serves you coffee an engineer.
No one would call someone welding machinery a barista.
As you say, being a barber is what someone does, not what they are. — RussellA
I agree that if the sentence "this sentence contains fifty words" is inferred to mean that this sentence, ie the sentence "this sentence contains fifty words", contains fifty words, then this is not paradoxical and is false.
However, we are not discussing what the sentence "this sentence contains fifty words" is inferred to mean, we are discussing what it literally means.
And because not grounded in the world, if "this sentence" is referring to "this sentence contains fifty words", it has no truth-value and is meaningless. — RussellA
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