The last attmep wasn't very encouraging, but Just for laughs... here's another attempt to present a logical argument--and see what kind of comments I get.Talk (thought) is cheap.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liar_paradox"
The illiterates of the 21st century will not be those who cannot read and write, but those who cannot learn, unlearn, and relearn." —Alvin Toffler
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“Silence [Stillness] is the true friend that never betrays.” —Confucius
arc-us
The simplest version of the liars paradox is probably just the sentence:
or more succinctly, simply:(L1) The statement I am making is false.
These sentences are paradoxical because, on the one hand, if the person who utters them is telling the truth then they must be truthfully saying that they are lying. But if they are indeed lying then how can they be telling the truth? On the other hand, if the person who utters them is telling a lie, then what they are saying must be the opposite of the truth. Since they are sying that they are lying, this means that they must be telling the truth--which is incompatibel with the original premise that they are lying.(L2) I am lying.
My Resolution
This version of the paradox can be resolved rather simply by understanding that sentences which are intended to convey [truth and mean] are always defined by the two reciprocal aspects--[truth] and [meaning]. What is important to understand about this relationship is that
For an example of a statement that has [meaning] but no [inherent truth value], consider the following statement:the meaning aspect does not convey a sense of truth; and
the truth aspect does not convey a sense of meaing.
On its own, (H) is neither [true] nor [false]. If the pronoun [he] is understood to refer to a [particular Tom who is in love], then (R) is understood to be [true]. But if [he] refers to a [particular John who is not in love], then (R) is understood to be [false]. The important thing to understand is that (H) only takes on a truth value when it is being used to refer to a specific person.(H) He is in love.
There are also examples of statements that have an [inherent sense of truth] but no [inherent meaning]. For example,
Obviously, the symbols themselves have meaning. We know that [x] is a vague variable; and we know what [is absolutely equal to] means. But the sentence doesn't tell us anything that we don't already know before we read it. It is something that can be known a priori.(X) x = x ...............(Read, x is absolutely equal to x.)
The reason this is important (with respect to the Liar's Paradox) is because it means that (L) the liar's statement (in whatever version) is neither [true nor false] until we apply it to a specific situation. This is evidenced by the fact that if (L1) or (L2) are not being spoken by someone they they cease to be paradoxical. When not spoken (L2) simply conveys a meaning that might be expressed as:
It makes no sense to even consider assigning a [truth value] to the statement until someone actually utters the phrase.The first person speaker is lying
Now, we have already seen that [truth] and [meaning] are independent--or, in other words, we can have a sentence with one aspect and not the other. Most of the time, these two aspects are united by making the statement refer to a specific instance. The cleverness of the Liar's Paradox is that it is structured in such a way that it becomes impossible for these two aspects to become united--as they normally are. This is done by making (L1) a negative statement about itself.
Now, in order to determine if the meaning of (L1) is [true], we must refer back to (L1) as the confirming or disconfirming instance. The reason this is so terribly problematic is because it violates a fundamental principle of sentence structure. As we stated earlier, some sentences have [inherent meaning] and others have [inherent truth], but in both cases, the sentence is given it's [sense of the reciprocal aspect] by comparing it to something that is [not the sentence]. For example,
has inherent meaning--and we give it a [sense of truth], by making (H) about a [specific someone]. That someone is outside of (H). They are other than (H). There is nothing about (H) that implies who that someone should be. Similarly,(H) He is in love.
has inherent truth--and we give it a [sense of meaning], by making (X) about something that isn't in (X). For instance, we might replace [x] with [apple1]. Thus (X) becomes:(X) x = x
Now, (X), which was without a specific meaning has taken on the specific meaning that [an apple is an apple].(A) apple1 = apple1
The Liar's Paradox is created by violating this fundamental rule of reciprocal structure. Now, instead of [one aspect being derived from within the sentence] and [one aspect being derived from outside the sentence]--both aspects are derived from within. The necessary (and expected) result is that (L) can no longer function as a bridge that unites the two reciprocal aspects of a sentence into one [meaningful truth]--the way most practical sentences do. Instead, it creates a sentence that is incapable of carrying a [sense of truth].
This is not a paradoxical situation, because it is exactly what we should expect. (At least if we assume that all things are defined by reciprocal aspects, as I do.)
When we look to (L) as the [confirming instance that provides a sense of truth] to [L's meaning], there is nothing to provide the desired [truth] because the instance is simply [L's meaning--which is devoid of truth]. If (L) simply stated that the sentence was true, then there wouldn't be an apparent paradox. It would still only be a statement that had meaning but no truth. We understand this at an intuitive level, but it is easy to overlook when we're using our rational minds to scrutinizing it carefully. Thus it seems easy to suppose that [This statement is true] might actually be a true statement. And even if not there isn't any contradiction. But becasue the meaning of (L) is that it is false, it seems reasonable to assume that there is a contradiction--even though the statement still only meaning and no truth.
Finding this [absence of truth] unsatisfactory, we can choose to arbitrarily assume that (L) will have one truth value or the other. But as the paradoxical result confirms, this is an invalid assumption. Because we have broken the rules of forming a sentence--we have made it impossible for (L) to carry a [value of truth].