For example, in a math book may appear sentences that were typed by an author but are not considered to be specific to any one person. For example, I can display the sentence, "Harry Truman was a president" and that sentence can be discussed no matter that its just typed by me. — TonesInDeepFreeze
The other poster said that sentences have truth value only if they refer to "the material world" and not themselves. — TonesInDeepFreeze
You continue your habit of falsely attributing quotes. He said nothing about the "material" world. — Leontiskos
There is always an implicit or implied speaker. — Leontiskos
You are lying that I "continue". — TonesInDeepFreeze
Not for me. I can consider a sentence for consideration without assuming an implied speaker, and certainly not an implied speaker who asserts it to be true. — TonesInDeepFreeze
If the mind is pure matter (brain, nervous system) and it can compute Godel's truths — Gregory
You are lying that I "continue".
— TonesInDeepFreeze
You are full of vapid nitpicking. — Leontiskos
When someone considers the claim, "Colourless green ideas sleep furiously," you will inform them that the statement they are considering is nonsensical. — Leontiskos
For example, in a math book may appear sentences that were typed by an author but are not considered to be specific to any one person. For example, I can display the sentence, "Harry Truman was a president" and that sentence can be discussed no matter that its just typed by me. — TonesInDeepFreeze
But, again, (1) It is a light year away from a "habit". — TonesInDeepFreeze
You wrote a falsehood, and apparently for effect. Instead of owning your own words, you speciously turn it back on me, to fault me for catching your lie. — TonesInDeepFreeze
You skipped my examples that are not of that kind. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Just now, you referenced the sentence "colourless green ideas sleep furiously" without there being an implied speaker other than a hypothetical one. — TonesInDeepFreeze
And previously — TonesInDeepFreeze
Also, consider the following sentence that I am not asserting but merely displaying so that we can talk about it:
This sentence has five words. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Sure you do. When someone considers the claim, "Colourless green ideas sleep furiously," you will inform them that the statement they are considering is nonsensical. We could say that to consider a possible utterance is to speak it secundum quid, and what is not able to be spoken is not able to be considered. The objection to such a consideration is always something like, "No one in their right mind would ever speak such a thing." To consider an utterance that has no possible speaker is to consider a nonsensical utterance.
Bringing this back, then, to the OP, we should ask whether the "sentences" in question—along with their attributed meaning—have any possible speaker. For example, is it possible for someone to speak, "I am lying," while simultaneously meaning that they are lying and that they are not-lying? No, it is not. There is no possible speaker in such cases, and hence the "sentences" are nonsensical (even in the additional cases where they are thought to have an extrinsic object). — Leontiskos
But the other poster said that sentences have truth value only if they refer to "the world" and not themselves. But is that true? "This sentence has five words" has no truth value?
Count the words and decide whether or not the sentence is true, or don't decide. — TonesInDeepFreeze
It is true that we can treat sentences as objects of predication, but the difference is that the number of words that a sentence contains is a material property, not a formal property. So ↪RussellA could say, "Colourless green ideas sleep furiously," has five words, but he could not say, "Colourless green ideas sleep furiously," is true (or meaningful). Counting words and affirming a truth value are two different things. — Leontiskos
the other poster said that sentences have truth value only if they refer to "the world" and not themselves. But is that true? "This sentence has five words" has no truth value?
Count the words and decide whether or not the sentence is true, or don't decide. — TonesInDeepFreeze
is it possible for someone to speak, "I am lying," while simultaneously meaning that they are lying and that they are not-lying? — Leontiskos
You skipped my examples that are not of that kind.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
I addressed your example of word-counting. — Leontiskos
Just now, you referenced the sentence "colourless green ideas sleep furiously" without there being an implied speaker other than a hypothetical one.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Where have I said that the implied speaker cannot be hypothetical? — Leontiskos
Perhaps you have a habit that you are not aware of. Someone wrote a single post in the whole thread and you managed to misquote that single, short post. I submit that what is at play is the strawmanning that you are often engaged in, for your idiosyncratic interpretations always harm the legitimacy of your interlocutor's position. — Leontiskos
conflating (purported) falsehoods with lies. But we've been over that already. — Leontiskos
The matter I addressed whether self-referential sentences all must be disqualified, not whether the liar sentence in particular must be disqualified. — TonesInDeepFreeze
And we may consider sentences that are displayed without implication that they have an implied or even hypothetical speaker. There instances in which we may consider display of a sentence so that we may consider it in and of itself. — TonesInDeepFreeze
is it possible for someone to speak, "I am lying," while simultaneously meaning that they are lying and that they are not-lying? — Leontiskos
What I am primarily interested in is the OP. I am sure Russell can speak for himself. — Leontiskos
not grammatically correct — Leontiskos
And I did engage the original question. And I've given good background and information about. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Recently in another thread another poster took exception to certain senses of 'grammatical'. — TonesInDeepFreeze
And we may consider sentences that are displayed without implication (sic) that they have an implied or even hypothetical speaker. There (sic) instances in which we may consider display (sic) of a sentence so that we may consider it in and of itself. — TonesInDeepFreeze
And we may consider sentences that are displayed without implication (sic) that they have an implied or even hypothetical speaker. There (sic) instances in which we may consider display (sic) of a sentence so that we may consider it in and of itself.
— TonesInDeepFreeze — Leontiskos
Despite the fact that these sentences of yours are not grammatically correct, you are of course welcome to try to defend your assertions.
Here is the central sort of question you are avoiding:
is it possible for someone to speak, "I am lying," while simultaneously meaning that they are lying and that they are not-lying?
— Leontiskos — Leontiskos
The so-called "Liar's paradox" seems quite silly
— Leontiskos
Knowing something about logic and the context helps to understand why the liar paradox is of interest.
I agree it's not much use to spend much time pondering about them
— leo
Me too.
— Leontiskos
Good then that no one is forcing you to spend time on it. But meanwhile it is worth time to people who study logic. — TonesInDeepFreeze
It is true that knowing the way many writers in logic have not found the subject silly helps to understand why it is of interest. — TonesInDeepFreeze
8 non-committal replies with more unfounded assertions, all in response to posts that were written some five years ago. — Leontiskos
Hence my reply:
Despite the fact that these sentences of yours are not grammatically correct, you are of course welcome to try to defend your assertions.
Here is the central sort of question you are avoiding:
is it possible for someone to speak, "I am lying," while simultaneously meaning that they are lying and that they are not-lying?
— Leontiskos
— Leontiskos — Leontiskos
The proponent of the "Liar's paradox" wants to say something like, "This sentence is false,"* represents something that is simultaneously true and false in the way that presents a formal contradiction. I have no idea what they purport to mean by this. — Leontiskos
Again, you are prosecuting the fact that I don't presume to have a full explanation of, and resolute position on, the liar paradox. — TonesInDeepFreeze
So still nothing contentful, about the topic of the thread? Still just talking about yourself? — Leontiskos
Do you often get stuck in front of mirrors? — Leontiskos
Argumentum ad populum, then? — Leontiskos
You have made it abundantly clear that you will continue to refuse to answer the question of the OP. — Leontiskos
What are you, The Philosophy Forum interrogation officer? — TonesInDeepFreeze
The proponent of the "Liar's paradox" wants to say that something like, "This sentence is false,"* represents something that is simultaneously true and false in the way that constitutes a formal contradiction. I have no idea what they purport to mean by this. I think they are confused. I challenge them to give a coherent explanation for their thesis.
* Or that, "I am lying," represents an utterance that is simultaneously a lie and a non-lie. — Leontiskos
Yes, I understand what you were saying. It is a form of argumentum ad populum. — Leontiskos
I forgot to put you back on my ignore list when I reinstalled my browser. — Leontiskos
I did not assert the sentence "Phil is a fool". There is no implied actual speaker of the sentence. And there is no implied hypothetical speaker of the sentence. Merely, I mentioned the sentence for consideration. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Sure you do. When someone considers the claim, "Colourless green ideas sleep furiously," you will inform them that the statement they are considering is nonsensical. We could say that to consider a possible utterance is to speak it secundum quid, and what is not able to be spoken is not able to be considered. The objection to such a consideration is always something like, "No one in their right mind would ever speak such a thing." To consider an utterance that has no possible speaker is to consider a nonsensical utterance.
Bringing this back, then, to the OP, we should ask whether the "sentences" in question—along with their attributed meaning—have any possible speaker. For example, is it possible for someone to speak, "I am lying," while simultaneously meaning that they are lying and that they are not-lying? No, it is not. There is no possible speaker in such cases, and hence the "sentences" are nonsensical (even in the additional cases where they are thought to have an extrinsic object). — Leontiskos
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