Wouldn't you agree we must assume a liar to be a liar most of the time — Gregory
Right. The so-called "Liar's paradox" seems quite silly, akin to something a third grader thought up at recess. — Leontiskos
It is impossible to definitively define what a lie is. — Treatid
The perception of a lie doesn't exist in written words - it exists in your mind. — Treatid
However, understanding exactly why the paradox is not very paradoxical illuminates the nature of understanding and has direct implications in our pursuit of knowledge. — Treatid
Godel's incompleteness theorems use the same basic structure as The Liar's paradox. As such, it is worth understanding the principles of contradiction/paradox. — Treatid
The observer may in fact determine that these five words are not part of a language, in that they are not a statement. — RussellA
Kripke proposed that a statement that refers to itself cannot have a truth-value as not grounded in the world, and only statements that are grounded in the world can have a truth value. — RussellA
If I am right then [the paradox] requires that there be no speaker at all, even implicit or hypothetical. — Leontiskos
What the proponent of the "Liar's paradox" fails to understand is that the two senses they attribute to the same sentence are mutually exclusive, and it is impossible for a speaker to intend or mean them both. — Leontiskos
"To say, "Wow, but what if he is lying and telling the truth at the same time!?," is to fall into incoherence while pretending to be sophisticated." — Leontiskos
Trying to overcome the principle of non-contradiction with the "Liar's paradox" — Leontiskos
I have run into individuals on TPF who think the "Liar's paradox" is so impressive that it justifies them in rejecting the principle of non-contradiction. Apparently such people call themselves "dialetheists." — Leontiskos
This is what I see as silly, and I don't think it has much to do with Godel. — Leontiskos
Studying someone else's mistake can always lead to insight, but I don't see this mistake as particularly helpful or important. — Leontiskos
Godel's incompleteness theorems use the same basic structure as The Liar's paradox. — Treatid
Some have argued that, <Godel's Incompleteness theorems are important, therefore the "Liar's paradox" is important>. — Leontiskos
If the barber shaves those and only those and all those who do not shave themselves then he doesnt shave himself — Gregory
I think you are making this a tar baby toward no genuine purpose — Gregory
He just doesn't shave himself because he shaves only those who do NOT shave themselves. — Gregory
So this is just Russell's paradox in a simple form.? — Gregory
I didn't read the whole speech but Hawking said this about incompleteness — TonesInDeepFreeze
"G can not be demonstrated from the axioms of mathematics." That's really bad and it is the kind of thing that leads people (who don't know the theorem) to make unfortunate inferences about the theorem. — TonesInDeepFreeze
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Axiomatic_system
In practice, not every proof is traced back to the axioms. At times, it is not even clear which collection of axioms a proof appeals to.
one elusive further unspecified set of axioms in mathematics that they do not even explicitly name, because that is irrelevant to what they are doing. — Tarskian
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Axiomatic_system
In practice, not every proof is traced back to the axioms. At times, it is not even clear which collection of axioms a proof appeals to.
Meanwhile, it is crucial not to say, "G can not be demonstrated from the axioms of mathematics", since that is plainly false. — TonesInDeepFreeze
So what? The incompleteness theorem has nothing to do with that, since the incompleteness theorem regards formal theories in which the axioms are explicit and such that theorems are strictly from explicit axioms. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I don't whole hog buy into your general view about language, but for the sake of argument, suppose these matters are observer dependent. May not another observer determine that it is a statement? — TonesInDeepFreeze
So I don't trust that the very brief synopsis does justice to Kripke's view. — TonesInDeepFreeze
meaningless until sooner or later a word corresponds with something in the world. — RussellA
Meanwhile, it is crucial not to say, "G can not be demonstrated from the axioms of mathematics", since that is plainly false.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
For Hawking's audience of physicists, the term "axioms of mathematics" refers to PA or ZFC. — Tarskian
A mathematical theory in which Gödel's incompleteness does not apply -- because it cannot even do arithmetic -- is probably not even in use anywhere in sciences. — Tarskian
what Hawking said, may be technically false, but in all practical terms it will never lead to problems. — Tarskian
In practice, not every proof is traced back to the axioms. At times, it is not even clear which collection of axioms a proof appeals to.
So what? The incompleteness theorem has nothing to do with that, since the incompleteness theorem regards formal theories in which the axioms are explicit and such that theorems are strictly from explicit axioms. — TonesInDeepFreeze
That is indeed the case from the standpoint of mathematical logic. — Tarskian
Gödel always applies to the default context in their typical environment. — Tarskian
But is it the case that all self-referential sentences are meaningless? — TonesInDeepFreeze
a word, clause, or phrase or a group of clauses or phrases forming a syntactic unit which expresses an assertion, a question, a command, a wish, an exclamation, or the performance of an action, that in writing usually begins with a capital letter and concludes with appropriate end punctuation, and that in speaking is distinguished by characteristic patterns of stress, pitch, and pauses
"This sentence has five words" has five words. The meaning of the sentence is that the predicate (has five words) holds for the subject ("This sentence has five words"); and its truth value is 'true'. — TonesInDeepFreeze
It's not the case that in general self-reference using the pronoun 'this' is meaningless: "This Guy's In Love With You" — TonesInDeepFreeze
It's not the case that a sentence referencing a sentence is meaningless: — TonesInDeepFreeze
So, why would "This sentence has five words" be meaningless? — TonesInDeepFreeze
It would help to have an explanation of what you mean by 'the world'. — TonesInDeepFreeze
it seems your argument should allow that sentences are in "the world". I surmise you would agree — TonesInDeepFreeze
If I am correct in my belief that any set of words that is self-referential must be meaningless, then this set of words shouldn't be called a "sentence", as a sentence is a syntactic unit in language that does have a meaning. — RussellA
If I am correct in my belief that any set of words that is self-referential must be meaningless, then this set of words shouldn't be called a "sentence", as a sentence is a syntactic unit in language that does have a meaning. — RussellA
The form of these marks exists in the world, whilst the content of these marks only exists in the mind of a sentient observer. — RussellA
On the screen I see the sentence "this sentence has ten words"
I can then write on the same screen "the sentence "this sentence has ten words" has five words"
The predicate "has five words" is referring to "the sentence "this sentence has ten words"" — RussellA
It's not the case that in general self-reference using the pronoun 'this' is meaningless: "This Guy's In Love With You"
— TonesInDeepFreeze
I agree that there is nothing ungrammatical about the sentences "this sentence has five words" and "this guy is in love with you"
However, as the pronoun "this" is external to both "the sentence" and "the guy", the pronoun isn't being self-referential.
The problem arises when the sentence is being self-referential, in the event that "this sentence has five words" is referring to itself and "this guy is in love with you" is referring to itself. — RussellA
So, why would "This sentence has five words" be meaningless?
— TonesInDeepFreeze
It depends what "this sentence" refers to. If it refers to the sentence "this sentence has five words", then it has a truth-value, but if it refers to "this sentence has five words", then it has no truth-value. — RussellA
As an Indirect Realist, I perceive things through my five senses. My belief is that these perceptions have been caused by something outside me, and this something outside me I call "the world". — RussellA
I agree that marks exist in the world, but only a sentient being can attach a meaning to these marks. Only a sentient being knows when a set of marks is a part of a language. Only a sentient being knows when a set of marks is a sentence, meaning that sentences only exist in the mind.
Sets of marks exist in the world. Sentences exist in the mind. — RussellA
but will remain meaningless until sooner or later a word corresponds with something in the world. — RussellA
'This string has five words' Is that a sentence? — TonesInDeepFreeze
"This string has five words" asserts that "This string has five words" has five words. That seems meaningful. — TonesInDeepFreeze
"This string has five words".................'has five words' corresponds with the property of a string having five words, which is something that I observe some strings to have. — TonesInDeepFreeze
"This string has five words"
The words seem to me to correspond with things in the world. — TonesInDeepFreeze
On the screen I see the sentence "this sentence has ten words"
I can then write on the same screen "the sentence "this sentence has ten words" has five words"
The predicate "has five words" is referring to "the sentence "this sentence has ten words""
— RussellA
Wrong. It's referring to the sentence "this sentence has ten words", which is to say that it is referring to "this sentence has ten words".
The sentence "this sentence has ten words" is "this sentence has ten words".
The sentence "this sentence has ten words" is not "The sentence "this sentence has ten words"".
And if your argument is supposed to be addressing mine, then no matter anyway, since I didn't use a construction "the sentence "this sentence has five words", and even if I had, your argument would be wrong since:
The sentence "this sentence has five words" has five words
is not saying
"The sentence "this sentence has five words"" has five words — TonesInDeepFreeze
Suppose we define 'the Pentastring' as the "This string has five words".
So, we have a subject from the world, viz. the Pentastring.
So, "The Pentastring has five words" is meaningful.
To determine whether the Pentastring is true, we determine whether the Pentastring has five words.
Put this way:
In "This string has five words", 'this string' refers to the Pentastring, which is in the world. And "This string has five words" is equivalent with "The Pentastring has five words", in the sense that each is true if and only if the Pentastring has five words. So, "This string has five words" is meaningful.
To determine whether "The Pentastring has five words" is true, we determine whether the Pentastring has five words, which is to determine whether "This string has five words" has five words. To determine whether "This string has five words" is true, we determine whether "This string has five words" has five words. The determination of the truth value of the Pentastring is exactly the determination of the truth value of "This string has five words". — TonesInDeepFreeze
Possibility 1) If "this string" is referring to a string of characters existing in the world, such as the characters on my keyboard, then the set of words "This string has five words" is meaningful, is a sentence, has a truth-value and can be either true or false. — RussellA
Possibility 2) If "this string" is referring to itself, then it is an empty reference, and the set of words "this string has five words" is meaningless, isn't a sentence and has no truth-value. — RussellA
Possibility 3) If "this string" is referring to "This string has five words", then the expression "this string" can be replaced by "this string has five words". — RussellA
If "This string has five words" did assert that "This string has five words" has five words
then "This string has ten words" would be asserting that "This string has ten words" has ten words, which is not the case. — RussellA
'this string' corresponds with the string "This string has five words".
'has five words' corresponds with the property of a string having five words, which is something that I observe some strings to have. — TonesInDeepFreeze
I see on my screen the set of words "this string has five words", and I see that there are five words in this set of words.
I see on my screen the set of words "this string has ten words", and I see that there are five words in this set of words.
I see on my screen the set of words "Diese Zeichenfolge besteht aus fünf Wörtern", and I see that there are six words in this set of words.
I go into a shop and buy five apples and notice that the time is exactly five pm. There is no logical link between the fact that I bought five apples and the fact that the time is five pm. That both involve the number five is accidental. — RussellA
Similarly, that the content of the set of words "this string has five words" and the form of the set of words involves five is also accidental. — RussellA
'this string' corresponds with the string "This string has five words".
'has five words' corresponds with the property of a string having five words, which is something that I observe some strings to have. — TonesInDeepFreeze
"This string has five words"
The words seem to me to correspond with things in the world.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
The underlying issue here is that there is no information in the 5 words which lets us know that it is self referential. The words “This string” (or “This sentence”) could be pointing to a different sentence, say, “Two plus two equals four”. — EricH
You say the the words seem to you to correspond with things in the world [emphasis in yours] — EricH
- and that may very well be the case - but in order to make that conclusion we need to rely on additional information NOT in those 5 words. — EricH
A) “The sentence identified by the letter A in this post has thirteen words”
This works, but we need to rely on information not in the sentence.
Alternatively, I could hand you a piece of paper and on that piece of paper would be the words “The sentence on this piece of paper I just handed you has fourteen words”
That also works, but again we are relying on information in the world. — EricH
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