Self contradictory expressions - assuming that is an expression which entails a contradiction or are otherwise equivalent to A&~A - are truth bearers. They have the capacity to be true or false - as in, it would mean something for the statement to be true, and mean something for the statement to be false. They just happen to be false. — fdrake
Go look up Prior's approach to the liar and see what you think. — fdrake
Therefore Since This statement is False is , in other words, This Statement is true and this statement is false, this no more than p=(-p), which is a contradiction, which is from ealier just not the case.
https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/8134/liar-paradox-the-three-laws-of-logic-are-intact
The meaning of 'antinomy' or 'epistemological antinomy' is not just 'self-contradictory'. — TonesInDeepFreeze
relating to the study of the nature, origin, and limits of human knowledge
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/epistemological
A self-contradictory phrase such as "There is no absolute truth" can be considered an antinomy
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antinomy
Whatever the case about compositional meaning, 'epistemology antinomy' does not mean merely 'self-contradictory'. — TonesInDeepFreeze
An antinomy is not just any self-contradiction. — TonesInDeepFreeze
One can look in a dictionary or in books and articles to see that there is more to being an antinomy than merely being a self-contradiction, especially in the subjects of philosophy or logic. — TonesInDeepFreeze
It would then be possible to
reconstruct the antinomy of the liar in the metalanguage
by forming in the language itself a sentence x such that the
sentence of the metalanguage which is correlated with x
asserts that x is not a true sentence.
https://liarparadox.org/Tarski_247_248.pdf — Tarski
Regarding Tarski, the poster just quotes again and again and again out of context and ignores the context explained to him dozens of times. He will continue to do that. At a certain point, replies are futile. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Anyone can look at pages 275-276 to see that no step in that proof uses the liar sentence. — TonesInDeepFreeze
If the liar sentence appears as a line in the undecidability proof then one could point exactly to the line. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Tarski's Liar Paradox from page 248
It would then be possible to reconstruct the antinomy of the liar
in the metalanguage, by forming in the language itself a sentence
x such that the sentence of the metalanguage which is correlated
with x asserts that x is not a true sentence.
https://liarparadox.org/Tarski_247_248.pdf
Formalized as:
x ∉ True if and only if p
where the symbol 'p' represents the whole sentence x
https://liarparadox.org/Tarski_275_276.pdf
adapted to become this
x ∉ Pr if and only if p // line 1 of the proof — PL Olcott
'x e T if and only if p' is not the liar sentence. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I did err in my previous post by overlooking the negation sign. And I should have emphasized again, for the 100th time, that 'unprovable' and 'untrue' are profoundly different. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I have no false assumptions in this context. But one of the many false assumptions of the poster is that "This sentence is not provable" is the liar sentence. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Now that the poster cannot support his dogmatically ignorant and confused claim — TonesInDeepFreeze
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