You can't define "mentions". — Treatid
You are trying to assert a set of invariant linguistic rules. — Treatid
you are trying to browbeat RussellA into believing that your interpretation of words is the one and only true interpretation. — Treatid
every single person who reads a sentence interprets it as they will. — Treatid
The idea that your personal interpretation of, say, the Liar's paradox is correct and everyone else is wrong is a level of hubris even I don't aspire to. — Treatid
I get that you are trying to establish a common ground for productive dialogue. But you can't do it. — Treatid
only person who interprets things identically to you - is an identical copy of you. — Treatid
for someone apparently sure of their position - you are peddling a whole lot of BS. Actually, [...] — Treatid
I struggle to understand how anyone with the slightest awareness of linguistics can turn around and proclaim a given interpretation to be definitive. And yet here you are trying to tell RusserlA that his interpretation is wrong.
For shame. — Treatid
do you genuinely believe that you can define... anything? — Treatid
"London" has six letters. The word is spoken about. London is populous. The word is used to refer to the city not to the word. It should be easy to see: London is a city. (true).................."London" is a city. (false - "London" is a word, not a city) — TonesInDeepFreeze
The use/mention distinction (as it has come to be called) is of particular relevance in the theory of definitions. For when we give the definition of a term, we mention the term, we do not use it. For example, the term, "pain", is defined, but pain itself is not defined. We define only terms, never their referents.
The video that was mentioned argues erroneously by conflating "refers to" with "equals". — TonesInDeepFreeze
I agree that expression ("London" is a city) is ungrammatical. — RussellA
However, in the expression ("London" is "a city"), as the linguistic expression "London" is being spoken about, this is also an example of mention. In this case that it is "a city". Note that "a city" is just a set of words, and is not referring to anything that may or may not exist in the world. — RussellA
As Treatid correctly points out: Me: I challenge you to define "Word". You: Words. Me: Define those words. You: More Words. Me: Define those words. Etc. You can choose infinite regression or circular definitions. — RussellA
The video that was mentioned argues erroneously by conflating "refers to" with "equals".
— TonesInDeepFreeze
The Liar Paradox
That the paradoxical expression "this sentence is false" is meaningless doesn't depend on the word "equals". The argument in the video is about meaning. — RussellA
I will repeat the argument — RussellA
In the expression "this sentence is false", which sentence is "this" referring to?
There are several possibilities.
Possibility one
It could be referring to the sentence "the cat is grey". In this case, the sentence "this sentence is false" means that the sentence "this cat is grey" is false, which is meaningful.
Possibility two
It could be referring to itself. In this case, the sentence "this sentence is false" means that the expression "this sentence" is false. But this is meaningless, and is similar to saying "this house" is false.
Possibility three
It could be referring to the sentence "this sentence is false". In this case, the sentence "this sentence is false" means that the sentence "this sentence is false" is false.
But we know that the sentence "this sentence is false" means that the sentence "this sentence is false" is false.
This means that the sentence "the sentence "this sentence is false" is false" is false
Ad infinitum. Therefore meaningless. — RussellA
If I'm following this, you stated that all self referential statements are meaningless. Tones disagrees with that and offers the counter example "This sentence has five words". I could be mistaken (happens on a regular basis) but it seems that this is meaningful under all three of your possibilities. — EricH
If you skip my main argument, then we won't get anywhere. — TonesInDeepFreeze
At least at first blush, "The string has five words" seems syntactic. A noun phrase, "This string" followed by a predicate, "has five words". — TonesInDeepFreeze
So you need to demonstrate that it is meaningless. But meanwhile, perhaps see if there is an error in the reasoning I gave for why we may take it to be meaningful. That reasoning could be wrong, but if it is, then I'd be interested to know how. — TonesInDeepFreeze
"This string has five words" asserts that "This string has five words" has five words. That seems meaningful. — TonesInDeepFreeze
So it seems "This string has five words" is a sentence as it fulfills the two requirements: syntactical and meaningful. — TonesInDeepFreeze
And "This string has five words" is true if "This string has five words" has five words, which it does; so "This string has five words" seems to be true. So, "This string has five words" seems to be true sentence. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Suppose we define 'the Pentastring' as the "This string has five words". — TonesInDeepFreeze
So, we have a subject from the world, viz. the Pentastring. — TonesInDeepFreeze
So, "The Pentastring has five words" is meaningful. — TonesInDeepFreeze
To determine whether the Pentastring is true, we determine whether the Pentastring has five words. — TonesInDeepFreeze
In "This string has five words", 'this string' refers to the Pentastring, which is in the world. — TonesInDeepFreeze
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. — TonesInDeepFreeze
To determine whether the Pentastring is true, we determine whether the Pentastring has five words. — TonesInDeepFreeze
which is to determine whether "This string has five words" has five words. — TonesInDeepFreeze
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
If I'm following this, you stated that all self referential statements are meaningless. Tones disagrees with that and offers the counter example "This sentence has five words". I could be mistaken (happens on a regular basis) but it seems that this is meaningful under all three of your possibilities. — EricH
It depends what the word "this" in the expression "this sentence is false" is referring to.
If it is referring, for example, to the sentence "this cat is grey", then the expression "this sentence is false" means that the sentence "this cat is grey" is false, which is meaningful.
But if it is referring to itself, then the expression "this sentence is false" means that the expression "this sentence" is false, which is like saying "this house" is false.
Surely in this instance, isn't it the case that both "this sentence" is false and "this house" is false are meaningless? — RussellA
Perhaps you were in a hurry when you responded, but I wasn't talking about the Liar Statement, I was talking about Tones' counter example "The sentence has five words." So in all 3 of your scenarios "This sentence has five words" appears to be meaningful. — EricH
Now if I'm following from your last reply to Tones you seem to be acknowledging this - but you are claiming that because "This sentence has five words" asserts a situation in the real world then it is no longer self referential. Am I following you correctly? — EricH
Suppose we define 'the Pentastring' as the [string] "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
The sentence "the Pentastring has five words" is not self-referential, because we have been explicitly told that the Pentastring exists in the world, ie we have a subject from the world, viz. the Pentastring. — RussellA
A self-referential expression cannot refer to something existing in the world. — RussellA
As to whether a sentence which is seemingly self referential but instead points to the world is truly self referential or not? — EricH
Possibility two
It could be referring to itself. In this case, the sentence"this sentence is false""this sentence has five words" means that the expression "this sentence"is falsehas five words.But this is meaningless, and is similar to saying "this house" is false.. This is meaningful but false ("this sentence" has two words.).........................So AFAICT the Pentastring is meaningful in all 3 of your possibilities. Yes this is a minor point, but I wanted to clear it up. — EricH
Notice that there you left out that the Pentastring is "This string has five words". — TonesInDeepFreeze
"London" is a city. (false - "London" is a word, not a city) — TonesInDeepFreeze
"This string has five words" is an expression, whilst the Pentastring is something that exists in the world. — RussellA
This Pentastring is this string of five words - OK — RussellA
The Pentastring is this string of five words - not OK
This Pentastring is the string of five words - not OK
"The Pentastring is this string of five words" - not OK
"This Pentastring is the string of five words" - not OK — RussellA
I said that it seems to me that there are self-referring expressions that are meaningful but that I'm open to be being convinced otherwise and that I'm interested in finding any flaws there might be with the Pentastring argument.You wrote that your belief is that some self-referring expressions can be meaningful, and give the Pentastring example — RussellA
This string has five words" asserts that "This string has five words" has five words. That seems meaningful.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Why? If it did, then "this string has ten words" would assert that "this string has ten words" has ten words. — RussellA
So it seems "This string has five words" is a sentence as it fulfills the two requirements: syntactical and meaningful.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Not necessarily. It depends what "this string" refers to. If it refers to either "this string" or "this string has five words", then it is self-referential and meaningless. — RussellA
"This string has five words" is true if "This string has five words" has five words, which it does; so "This string has five words" seems to be true. So, "This string has five words" seems to be true sentence.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
Then it would follow that "the cat is grey" is true if "the cat is grey" has four words. That the sentence "the cat is grey" has four words doesn't make it true that the cat is grey. — RussellA
we define 'the Pentastring' as the [string] "This string has five words".
— TonesInDeepFreeze
No problem, let's define 'the Pentastring' as the "This string has five words". This sounds very similar to defining 'Big Ben' as "the bell inside the clock tower". — RussellA
But we know that "the Pentastring" has been defined as "This string has five words". Therefore "The Pentastring has five words" means that "this string has five words has five words". But this doesn't seem grammatical, and if not grammatical, then meaningless — RussellA
objects existing in the world, such as Big Ben and the Pentastring have no truth value,they can be neither true not false. — RussellA
The sentence "the Pentastring has five words" has five words. It is not the Pentastring that has five words. — RussellA
the sentence "The Pentastring has five words" means that "this string has five words has five words" — RussellA
determine whether the Pentastring is true, we determine whether the Pentastring has five words.
— TonesInDeepFreeze
[...] is not an example of self-reference. A Pentastring is a string of five adjacent words existing in the world. — RussellA
it is true that the sentence "this string has five words" has five words. It is also true that the sentence "the cat is grey" has four words.
The fact that the sentence "the cat is grey" has four words is irrelevant to whether the cat is grey. Similarly, the fact that the sentence "this string has five words" has five words is irrelevant to whether this string has five words. — RussellA
sentence "the cat is grey" is true if the cat is grey. Similarly, the sentence "this string has five words" is true if this string has five words. — RussellA
As a Pentastring is a string of five words — RussellA
An expression that refers to itself can never have a meaning
An expression can only have a meaning if it refers to something outside itself. — RussellA
We are given the expression "this sentence has five words", yet we both agree that the expression "this sentence" has two words.
So how can the same expression have both two words and five words? — RussellA
It can only be that the expression "this sentence" in the first instance of its use is not referring to the second instance of its use. — RussellA
To isolate the key point: — TonesInDeepFreeze
Einstein's famous formula is "E=MC^2". — TonesInDeepFreeze
The expression "The Pentastring" refers to the expression "This string has five words". — TonesInDeepFreeze
The Pentastring is "This string has five words." — TonesInDeepFreeze
"London" is a city. (false - "London" is a word, not a city) — TonesInDeepFreeze
This sentence has five words. Not true? — TonesInDeepFreeze
Yes, true. — RussellA
Summary
In summary, I see a set of words on my screen. I see that there are five words, and this is true. The five words happen to be "this", "sentence", "has", "five" and "words". I, as the observer, recognize a meaning in the five words as "this sentence has five words". Words being inanimate cannot refer. Only a conscious observer outside the words can refer. In the mind of this conscious outside observer, the words "this sentence" refers to the statement "this sentence has five words", which is true. — RussellA
Going back to your 3 possibilities, this is the form of your Possibility 3. So as I read this, you consider "This sentence has five words" to be true under your Possibility 3. Am I getting this right? — EricH
As regards usage, as more than one Pentastring exists in the world, the expression "The Pentastring" is not referring to one particular Pentastring, but is being used to refer to a general class of objects. — RussellA
No, I didn't define a predicate "is a Pentastring". Rather, I defined a name "The Pentastring". — TonesInDeepFreeze
I would have thought that the formula E=MC^2 shouldn't be in quotation marks. For example, science is culturally important, and "science" has seven letters. Similarly, E=MC^2 is famous, and "E=MC^2" has six characters. — RussellA
Pentastring is "This string has five words."
— TonesInDeepFreeze
This is grammatically incorrect, as an object in the world is not an expression in language. — TonesInDeepFreeze
If I said "this sentence" is "this sentence". this would be meaningless. — RussellA
I said "this sentence has five words" is "this sentence has five words", this would also be meaningless. — RussellA
such self-referential expressions cannot have any meaning. — RussellA
are there any examples in language where a linguistic expression that refers to itself has a meaning? — RussellA
When I first introduced the term "The Pentastring", I used it as a name not an adjective. — TonesInDeepFreeze
("The Pentastring" is a name for the expression "This string has five words".) — TonesInDeepFreeze
"London" is a city. (false - "London" is a word, not a city) — TonesInDeepFreeze
I said that The Pentastring is "This string has five words". — TonesInDeepFreeze
"Mark Twain" is a name for the person Samuel Clemens. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Mark Twain is Samuel Clemens. — TonesInDeepFreeze
"The Pentastring" is a name for the expression "This string has five words". — TonesInDeepFreeze
The Pentastring is "This string has words". — TonesInDeepFreeze
This sentence has five words. Not true? — TonesInDeepFreeze
Yes, true. — RussellA
Summary
In summary, I see a set of words on my screen. I see that there are five words, and this is true. The five words happen to be "this", "sentence", "has", "five" and "words". I, as the observer, recognize a meaning in the five words as "this sentence has five words". Words being inanimate cannot refer. Only a conscious observer outside the words can refer. In the mind of this conscious outside observer, the words "this sentence" refers to the statement "this sentence has five words", which is true. — RussellA — EricH
You said previously that "This sentence has five words" is true. Do you still hold that position. Yes or no? — EricH
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