Thursday, February 5, 2009

Liar paradox: Another dead end?

One might (why? I don't know why, but I did think this at some point) think that a distinction between thought and language, together with the idea that the only meaning language has is speaker meaning expressive of a thought, would help with the liar paradox. After all, it seems that the liar sentence is a merely linguistic curiosity, and does not express a thought.

But a variant of the liar escapes this. I am going to describe this variant through a story that seems to make it very plausible that there is a thought being expressed. Frank has two diaries. A blue one for insightful ideas and a gray one for humdrum observations. He feels that his insights haven't been very good lately. He thus thinks to himself, on good empirical evidence, that today is a day on which nothing true gets written down in the blue diary. He then reaches for his gray diary, and writes down this pessimistic thought: "Today is a day on which nothing true gets written down in the blue diary." However, although he had reached for the gray diary, he ended up writing down his thought in the blue one, because he was rather absentminded. So now his blue diary contains the entry: "Today is a day on which nothing true gets written down in the blue diary." Moreover, let us suppose that he writes nothing else in the blue diary today.

What I like about this story is it makes the paradoxical sentence have a genuine use in our language, rather than just being an excrescence in the way the standard liar sentence is.

It seems that what is written in the blue diary expresses a genuine, and even epistemically justified, thought that Frank had. But what is written in the blue diary is true if not true and false if true, according to his intentions. So the move to speaker meaning doesn't help.

If we add the further assumption that what is in the blue book successfully expresses Frank's thought, then Frank's thought is true if not true and false if true. So unless we abandon classical logic, we need to say that Frank's thought was not expressed by what he wrote. But why not? Had he written it in the gray book, it would have expressed the thought. And he wrote the same thing in the blue book. So there doesn't seem to be a mismatch between word and thought—the words seem just the right ones to do justice to the thought. Maybe, though, some variety of future-based externalism is true: maybe what, if any, thought has been thought can depend on what will transpire (e.g., on whether Frank writes something or not). That's a weird idea, but even apart from the Hegelianism that was rampant where I did my PhD, there is independent reason to accept that. E.g., I might dub Kenya's next child "Patrick." And then I might think to myself what seems to be the thought that Patrick will be a girl. But if Kenya doesn't have another child, then I haven't thought anything. But this line of thought leads to the very disquieting conclusion that introspection is not a perfect guide to whether I am having a thought—and that undercuts the cogito.

It seems that in these cases we must go for the least paradoxical claim. Denying classical logic is most paradoxical. So we either need to say that the meaningfulness of the sentence depends on where I happened to write it down, or I have to say that the meaningfulness of the thought depends on future events. Oddly, my present intuitions pull me towards the second, though the first seems less weird. Epistemic akrasia?

4 comments:

  1. A slightly less disconcerting conclusion would be that introspection is not a good guide to what thought you are having (as opposed to whether you are having a thought). Applied to the diary case, maybe what thought your sentence expresses depends on where you write it down.

    I don't know where to go with that suggestion and I'm not sure it helps.

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  2. Actually, presumably, it's not what the sentence expresses that differs, but whether the sentence expresses anything at all. For there is only one thing for the sentence in the blue diary to express--and we've got a good argument that it doesn't express that, since if it did, it would be true and not true.

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  3. Hi Alex: I'm wondering if the example you offer is a genuine Liar case. Clearly, Frank did not *intend* for the claim to apply to itself. So it would seem that there's a tacit qualification in his sentence, as follows: "Today is a day on which nothing true gets written down in the blue diary *except for this sentence, if it were to be written therein.*"

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  4. One can intend to make a claim quantified over a domain without intending the claim to hold in the case of a particular member of the domain (for instance, because one isn't thinking of that member). In some cases we might, after hearing an exception to a universally quantified claim, want to say: "I didn't mean to include x." But sometimes that's just face-saving, and if we were honest, we would have said; "I meant to include everything in the domain; but I now I know that I was wrong, because I now see that x is in the domain." I think the case at hand is the second of these--after writing down the sentence, Frank may regret having done so.

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