Can sentences self-refer? : Gödel and the liar
Creators
- 1. University of East Anglia
- 2. The Chinese University of Hong Kong
Description
In this article we discuss the issue of ‘self-reference’, i.e., the question whether (or
in which sense) sentences may be said to refer to themselves. Following Wittgenstein,
we suggest that the clearest thing to say is that sentences cannot of themselves
‘do’ or ‘say’ anything, but that it is human beings that ‘do’ and ‘say’. Consequently,
instances of self-reference have to be considered as part of specific human practices.
We illustrate these general remarks through the examination of the Liar Paradox
and Gödel’s Incompleteness Theorem (which uses a formally undecidable sentence,
which is sometimes taken to ‘say’ ‘I am not provable.’). We emphasise that in the
context of the ‘foundations of mathematics’ it is important to separate technicalmathematical
from philosophical questions, and argue (again following Wittgenstein)
that Gödel’s Incompleteness Theorem was more a contribution to the former
than the latter. In other words, Gödel’s result runs the risk of being over-interpreted,
and of falling foul of Wittgensteinian philosophy, if it is interpreted philosophically
to include focally a sentence that literally self-refers.
Notes
Files
10 Read and Greiffenhagen.pdf
Files
(285.1 kB)
Name | Size | Download all |
---|---|---|
md5:789406652062e15a5dc23907716b3459
|
285.1 kB | Preview Download |