Some claim he is ambiguous, others he is contradictory. — javi2541997
Am I missing something in that attempt to use logic? — javi2541997
But I was wondering what happened to A. — javi2541997
Yes, you're overcomplicating something very simple. C tells the truth. C says B is the liar. Therefore, B is the liar. — flannel jesus
A sometimes tells the truth. — flannel jesus
Who is the liar? — javi2541997
The three statements work on the understanding that A happened to be lying rather than telling the truth. — RussellA
A=can both lie and tell the truth — Igitur
Because you claim A can’t be a liar emphatically. — javi2541997
He can lie, I've said that explicitly — flannel jesus
everyone here except you has understood that b must be the liar. Who else do you see claiming a might be the liar? — flannel jesus
Person A is the person who sometimes tells the truth. If Person C is the person who always tells the truth then Person A is lying. — Michael
If A sometimes tells the truth it means he can also lie as well as B. — javi2541997
Prima facie these might mean two different things:
1. I only sometimes tell the truth
2. I sometimes tell the truth — Michael
Strictly speaking (2) might be true even if I always tell the truth. — Michael
Yes. And reaching (more or less) that conclusion, we can say that A is the ambiguous here. Right? — javi2541997
Or one of a and B sometimes, and the other one always tells the truth — flannel jesus
You edited your posts after reading the arguments of Michael and Igitur :lol: — javi2541997
Is it possible to formulate it using first-order logic? — javi2541997
There is no middle ground to account for person A , who is neither a "Liar" nor "Not a Liar". — RussellA
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