Suppose someone said to you
What I am now saying is a lie.
Is what they said true or false? If what
they said was true, then they are telling a lie so it is false; on the
other hand, if it is false then it isn't a lie and so must be true!
This paradox known as the Paradox of the
Liar is usually attributed to Epimenides - although it was actually
devised by Eubilides. Epimenides, who was a Cretan, was supposed to have
said
All Cretans are liars.
The problem is: Is he telling the truth
or not. It seems that if the sentence is true, then it is false. But if
it is false, then it is true.
A tempting way out is to suppose that the
problem is to do with the notion of self-reference, that Epimenides was
referring to himself when he said 'All Cretans are liars'. After all,
one favourite version of the paradox is
This sentence is false
and a clearer case of self-reference
couldn't be given, as the 'this' of the sentence refers to the sentence
itself.
Such a solution would, however, be
premature. Consider the following pair of sentences
The following sentence is true.
The preceding sentence is false.
Neither of these sentences refers to
itself, and yet the same paradox is generated: if the first sentence is
true then it is false - but if it is false then it is true. So the
problem can't be about self-reference.
Perhaps by now you may be thinking that
the problem is that such utterances as Epimenides' and the other
versions given above are not true or false but meaningless, that they
may, on the surface, appear to make sense but really have no more
meaning than the nonsense verse of Lewis Carroll. This solution may also
be attractive but consider the following case. You are walking down the
street and you find a card on the pavement which says
The sentence on the other side of this
card is true.
When you turn over the card, the other
side reads
The sentence on the other side of this
card is false.
The problem is that if the first sentence
was meaningless then how did you know that you should turn over the card
and read the other side...