As you have said many times on this thread, something in the world cannot be an expression in language. — RussellA
The Pentastring may be named as "this sentence has five words" — RussellA
the Pentastring isn't "this sentence has five words". — RussellA
Just because the name of the Pentastring has five words, it doesn't follow that the Pentastring itself has five words. — RussellA
Just because a name for the Eiffel Tower has two words, it doesn't follow that the Eiffel Tower itself has two words. — RussellA
"The Pentastring has five words" is not how "the Pentastring" has been defined. — RussellA
For the sake of argument, using sentence instead of string — RussellA
Then "the Pentastring is this sentence has five words" — RussellA
Therefore, "the Pentastring is this sentence has five words" is true IFF the Pentastring is this sentence has five words. — RussellA
"the Pentastring has five words" is true IFF the Pentastring has five words — RussellA
the Pentastring is this sentence has five words is not the same as the Pentastring has five words. — RussellA
Therefore, "the Pentastring has five words" is not how "the Pentastring" has been defined. — RussellA
And I may stipulate that in the context of my post, "This sentence" refers to "This sentence has five words"...On what basis is it claime[d] "This sentence has five words" [is] not meaningful? — TonesInDeepFreeze
On the basis of infinite recursion. — RussellA
There's no paradox because, as Quine says, "this sentence is false" is referring to something other than itself. — RussellA
the clear horseshit going on here. — AmadeusD
If you would read what I posted — TonesInDeepFreeze
I did. — AmadeusD
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.
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
Why did it take 9 pages. — AmadeusD
I have not dismissed any interlocutor on an ad hominem basis. Rather, I have engaged virtually every point he's tried to make, every claim, every argument - in detail and with thoroughness, and repeatedly in pace with his repetitiveness. And for a long time I made no personal comment about him. Meanwhile, his mode has to been to skip the rebuttals given him and shift his claims (but as if he has not) and spread a trail of red herrings . Then, in addition to my responding on point, I have also discussed that he is indeed ignorant on even basics and highly irrational in his arguments - and not just as free-floating characterizations, but in exact reference to the very specific points and arguments of his, as I have engaged virtually all of them. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Traditional logic, without considering the non-literal use of language — Echogem222
The Russel's paradox, "a set that contains all sets that do not contain themselves" is only a paradox to those who think that the word "set" is not a mirror. Those that understand it is a mirror understand that "a set that contains all sets that do not contain themselves" is a set that cannot exist — Echogem222
But the definition isn't constructive and is extensionally unintelligible for some of the reasons you pointed out in the OP. — sime
Dedekind didn't believe in the reality of cuts of the continuum at irrational numbers — sime
so that one never arrives at the antimonies you raised above. — sime
I am still not convinced that infinitesimal does not exist though. Can you prove it? — MoK
I googled and I found two references about the division of cardinal numbers. You can find the references here. — MoK
the distance between consecutive means tends to zero — MoK
Well, I showed that the distance between consecutive means is zero if the number of divisions is aleph_1. — MoK
and assumed the worst in all three turns (the initial "Why did it take..." — AmadeusD
I did not say that, thank you very much.
was in response to about eight posts — AmadeusD
(your point is these posts were an exchange between yourself and RussellA - unfortunately for me, it was also a couple of other posters, not just you two. My point was distancing my reply from the personal aspect you're tied to). — AmadeusD
[bold added]in response to about eight posts, none of which were at or about me best I can tell - it was discussion between yourself and RussellA. — AmadeusD
It was somewhat imprecise though. It was a comment on the previous set of comments, which were not to, about or for me - not a response to them. So I'll cop to that misunderstanding entirely. — AmadeusD
I reject your position on the basis its an emotional reaction — AmadeusD
But as it stood, it was you making a snarky put down of something or other. So, a form of dismissiveness. It is disingenious to toss out snark but pretend it's not. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Nope. Still nope. It is not. This is simply you outlining an ambiguity and then claiming the least-charitable version for your own ends. Not sure why you would, and it's not for me to explain. — AmadeusD
You haven't addressed the specifics of my argument about it. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Yes I have. Multiple times. — AmadeusD
But it's dishonest to pretend that one hasn't been sarcastic and to pretend that not even is it reasonable that another took you as sarcastic — TonesInDeepFreeze
Luckily, those two things are true, and I am not being dishonest. — AmadeusD
You ought not put strikethrough across my words within a quote like that.
I said "naturally" and I did not strike it. — TonesInDeepFreeze]
That was the point my guy. You did not 'naturally' react. — AmadeusD
perhaps had your ego hurt — AmadeusD
I tried to squash the 'beef'. Four times now, actually. — AmadeusD
I maintain it was. It was not in response to you directly, or indirectly. — AmadeusD
naturallycounter-attacking and defending. — TonesInDeepFreeze — AmadeusD
ou let out a fart of snark that would naturally be understood to be directed at me. — TonesInDeepFreeze — AmadeusD
I outline what I (still) recognise as a distasteful approach, but I very much appreciate your clarification here. Genuinely. Thank you. — AmadeusD — AmadeusD
You are clearly making some extremely sensitive inferences that don't make sense. — AmadeusD
I don't think the latter is dismissive at all. — AmadeusD
[not as you later claimed - TIDF] clearly indicated at the time. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I maintain it was. It was not in response to you directly, or indirectly. — AmadeusD
I already made two attempts to say "Cool man, we weren't having such a go at each other as it seemed" — AmadeusD
It wasn't aimed at me - the posts in question were responses to other people, so I revert to the above appreciation. — AmadeusD
just think its pretty distasteful to do what you've just done in an attempt to find some ad hominem-esque reason for dismissing an interlocutor. — AmadeusD
I can only laugh — AmadeusD
The professor looks at a Geography student's essay and says to the student: this sentence is false.
The student had written "Paris is in Germany". — RussellA
The paradox arises when "this sentence is false" is not referring to something other than itself. IE, when it is self-referential. — RussellA
Mary in 1975 in New York said "This sentence has five words".
Rafael in 1923 in Rio de Janeiro said "This sentence has five words"
Just because the wording is identical, this doesn't mean that they are the same sentence, the same linguistic object. In part, because we don't know what sentence they are referring to. — RussellA
The sentence is not paradoxical, but a lot of the ways in which this is the case, Russell has covered. — AmadeusD
So, whether or not the sentence is referring literally 'to itself' (this should answer your query about a sentence wanting to say something above) — AmadeusD
You can't simply read it in a way which is false, but meaningful by adding meaning to it, without sufficient reason. — AmadeusD
On it's face, it is plainly meaningless. — AmadeusD
it seems all you're wanting to do is have the sentence refer to itself — AmadeusD
If "this sentence" is referring to the sentence "The Eiffel Tower is a lattice tower on the Champ de Mars in Paris, France. It is named after the engineer Gustave Eiffel, whose company designed and built the tower from 1887 to 1889. Nicknamed "La dame de fer", it was constructed as the centrepiece of the 1889 World's Fair" then this sentence does have fifty words. — RussellA
In the sentence "this ferry contains fifty people", we don't normally think that "this ferry" is referring to the sentence "this ferry contains fifty people". We normally think that it is referring to a ferry in the world.
So why would we think that "this sentence" is referring to "this sentence contains fifty words". It seems more likely that "this sentence" is referring to another sentence. — RussellA
if I said "this sentence contains fifty words", the listener may infer that I meant that this sentence, ie the sentence "this sentence contains fifty words", contains fifty words. — 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. — RussellA
However, we are not discussing what the sentence "this sentence contains fifty words" is inferred to mean, we are discussing what it literally means. — RussellA
"This sentence contains fifty words" is true IFF this sentence contains fifty words. — RussellA
All I'm trying to say is that an expression that self-refers cannot be grounded in the world, and if not grounded in the world cannot have a truth value. — RussellA
"This sentence contains fifty words" is true IFF this sentence contains fifty words. — RussellA
The word "truth" in the following would be redundant:
"This sentence contains fifty words" is true IFF "this sentence contains fifty words" — RussellA
It is not correct to say that the sentence "this house is very tall" is true because it contains five words.
Similarly, it is not correct to say that the sentence "this sentence contains five words" is true because it contains five words. — RussellA
"This house is very tall" is true IFF this house is very tall, not because the sentence "this house is very tall" contains five words.
Similarly, "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
The subjective content of the sentence "this sentence contains five words" cannot determine the objective form of itself, ie, that it contains five words. — RussellA
how can any one say that "this sentence contains five words" is true if no one knows which sentence is being referred to? — RussellA
To say that "a horse is a horse" is true is saying no more than "a horse is a horse".
To say that "this sentence contains fifty words" is true is saying no more than "this sentence contains fifty words".
To say that "x" is true is saying no more than "x". — RussellA
Truth only enters when self-reference disappears — RussellA
Truth only enters when self-reference disappears — RussellA
I totally agree that there is nothing problematic with the sentence "this sentence contains five words", and can indeed be a meaningful sentence.
As long as "this sentence contains five words" is not referring to itself. — RussellA
If "this sentence contains five words" is referring to itself, then "this sentence contains five words" means that "this sentence contains five words". — RussellA
In other words, "X" means "X". — RussellA
the law of identity states that each thing is identical with itself. — RussellA
I agree that "X" means "X" — RussellA
how can "X" be described as a meaningful sentence? — RussellA