Robin
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Apr 29, 2004
- Messages
- 14,971
Firstly, a false statement does have a truth value.The example I used is used in uni POL courses, but with your example, it's fairly easy to resolve as well.
If all you ever did was tell the truth, then saying, "I always lie" is simply a single instance of a lie, and hence you statement is merely false, without any truth value.
If all you ever did was lie, then saying, "I always lie" is in fact a single instance of telling the truth, and hence your statement is again merely false, without any truth value.
And your "resolution" doesn't make any sense. A single instance of a lie would falsify "all I ever do is tell the truth" and a single instance of a truth would falsify "all I ever do is lie"
