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02-28-2003, 10:24 AM | #11 | ||||||
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The Non-liar Paradox
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Cheers, John |
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02-28-2003, 11:16 AM | #12 | |||
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Sorry for the late reply.
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Perhaps I'm misunderstanding your position, but you seem be addressing a matter that is external to that of logic (truth, rationality, etc.). But if that is the case, then your inquiry can have no consequences that affect truth from a logical standpoint. You can't have it both ways. Either your position has nothing to do with the logical aspect of truth, in which case the way we understand and apply logic and truth to our views remains unaffected. Or it does relate to the logical aspect of truth and faces the problems associated with skepticism about truth. Quote:
I'll be back later. |
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02-28-2003, 12:41 PM | #13 | |
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Re: Sorry for the late reply.
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Regarding your second point, I think we need to ask why things need to be true or false and why they need to be internal or external to logic. I am interested in the phenomenal aspects of truth in addition to formulation of these into systems of logic. On the third point, the accuracy of any model, IMO, should be measured against the "real thing". It appears that truth is internal to the mind, in which case we need to know what drives our conscious notion of truth. Cheers, John |
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03-01-2003, 06:36 AM | #14 | |||
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03-01-2003, 07:19 AM | #15 | |
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Hi John:
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Perhaps if you could give me an idea of what you mean by the real world (and unreal world) and how truths can be internal and external I might understand how you reach the position that this enables the logical process of inquiry. Cheers, John |
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03-01-2003, 07:48 AM | #16 | |||||
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Re: The Non-liar Paradox
John Page:
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F(P) = ~P(P) G = F(F) The right hand side of the definition of F (which is "~P(P)") does not contain F itself, and neither does the definition of G (which is "F(F)") contain G itself. Although G contains F in its definition, however F has already been defined even before we tried to define G, so there's no recursion here. (This is different from saying e.g. f(x) = f(x - 1) + x, where the right hand side of the definition of f also contains f.) Even though the definition of G contains no recursion, yet if we try to evaluate G, we still get a dialethia. Clearly the issue is deeper than one of literal self-reference. One may say that it's because the definition of F contains terms that can potentially refer to F itself. Quote:
When Russell's paradox was discovered, the responses all took the form of arranging concepts in some kind of hierarchy or stratification: concepts are put in layers starting from some layer 0, and concepts in layer i are only allowed to refer to concepts in layers 0 to i - 1. (What about recursive functions? It can be argued that, even when recursive functions are defined, the domain of the function should be stratified in some way, so that f(x) only depends on f(t) for t at a `lower layer' than x.) I think the restriction in first-order predicate logic, that arguments to predicates may not themselves involve predicates, can be thought of as a form of stratification. (Unfortunately, this restriction makes it difficult, if not impossible, to express things like "person X said P is true", for some general proposition P.) This brings me to... Quote:
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03-01-2003, 12:42 PM | #17 | ||
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True. Any charlatan could attempt to shield his philosophy from critical review in that manner, but I don't believe that such attempts would be successful. Philosophies are based on assumptions. And as long as those assumptions can be expressed as statements in a language that is intersubjectively meaningful, they are amenable to logic. In contrasting the terms "nonrational" (I checked the dictionary entry, and no hyphen is needed) and "irrational", I simply meant to show that there is a difference between beliefs, claims, etc., that are based on (or closely related to[?]) aspects of consciousness (such as "feelings", for example), and beliefs, claims, etc., that are logically or factually inconsistent (such as the claim that physical objects with attributes that are truly, and not merely apparently, contradictory can exist in the real world) no matter what they are based on. And as I stated in my last post, I would characterize the "Dialethic" disposition as "nonrational" rather than "irrational". I don't find much wrong with the temperament of Dialetheism. I just can't accept the view as rational. |
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03-03-2003, 05:09 AM | #18 | |
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Rationality
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But what is rationality? Example, some among us will consider the statement "No pigs exist" as perfectly rational and logical and the opposite of "Pigs exist". I ask you, how can "no pigs" "exist"? If there aren't any then how can they exist? Here are other formulations to further illustrate the point: "No pigs are present", "God does not exist". In this way I might argue that these statements are dialethic. So if the dialethic view is non-rational and propositional logic is rational, is the statement "No pigs are present" rational or not, and by what rule to you propose that I tell? Cheers, John |
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03-04-2003, 05:15 AM | #19 | |||||
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Sorry about the delay. Juggling commitments is keeping me busy.
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03-04-2003, 06:45 AM | #20 | ||
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Dialeteic justification for logic
jp:
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First, and further to the "no pigs exist" example (where my real issue is with the concept that "no pigs" might even have a material corollary) let me introduce the "minus three little pigs". Have you ever seen minus three of anything? Of course, we can understand each other through the concept of math, and we can notice that soemthing is missing when our three little pigs are no longer in view, but taken literally "minus three little pigs" is nonsense (and therefore has no truth value). IMO dialetheism admits that this statement can be both true and false - we can consider it either way depending what we believe is a reasonable or rational interpretation of the statement. Conclusion: It is the observer that makes the "truth" judgement. Second, how does the observer reach the truth judgement? Surely they must consider both the options and these may include "true" through "false" with "true and false" as a median value (which could also be called "neither true nor false", I guess). Thus, prior to making a "truth" judgement the observer's mind may set up opposite positions. Now I make a leap of intuition by suggesting that these positions are set up contemporaneously in the mind so they may be compared. When the "truth" judgement is made, this selection will be done from the available positions (*note below) the observers (subjective) frame of reference and the result, of course, may be either true or false. Forgive me if the above is not totally clear, its the first time I've tried to write down my (subjective ) perception of what is actually going on in our minds. I think the dialetheic(?) approach encompasses the processes that are necessary for propositional logic to exist. My own firebrand is multi-valued logic where absolutely true and absolutely false are meaningless points, of course, this condemns me to being only partially correct - an inevitable result of being constrained by my own grey matter! Comments welcome! Cheers, John * note "Available Positions" can be considered similar to the set (S) in the Axiom of Choice where we are free to choose our truth using the function f(S). (Axiom of Choice. Let C be a collection of nonempty sets. Then we can choose a member from each set in that collection. In other words, there exists a function f defined on C with the property that, for each set S in the collection, f(S) is a member of S.) |
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