Misplaced Pages

Present King of France: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editContent deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 10:47, 10 June 2001 edit213.121.88.xxx (talk)No edit summary← Previous edit Latest revision as of 14:07, 17 November 2019 edit undoGraham87 (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Event coordinators, Extended confirmed users, Page movers, Importers291,498 editsm 3 revisions imported: import oldest edits from "Present King of France" in the August 2001 database dump 
(19 intermediate revisions by 15 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
#REDIRECT ]
France is a ], and has no King.


{{Redirect category shell|1=
The phrase "the present King of France" comes from an example
{{R to section}}
by ], an apparent paradox raising some interesting questions about the law of the excluded middle, denotation, and so on.
{{R from subtopic}}

}}
Consider the statement "The present King of France is bald." Is this statement true? Is it false? It is meaningless?

It surely can't be true, for there is no present King of France.
But if it is false, then one would suppose that the negation of the statement is true, that is, "The present King of France has hair (is not bald)." But that doesn't seem any more true than the original statement.

Is it meaningless, then? One might suppose so, because it certainly does fail to denote in a sense, but on the other hand it sure seems to mean something that we can quite clearly understand.

Russell, extending the work of Gottlob Frege, who had similar thoughts, proposed that when we say "the present king of France is bald", we are making three separate assertions:

1.) there is an x such that x is the king of France
2.) there is no y, y not equal x, such that y is the king
of France (ie. x is the only king of France)
3.) x is bald.

Since assertion 1. is plainly false, and our statement is the conjunction of all three assertions, our statement is false.

Similarly, for "the present king of France is not bald", we have the identical assertions 1. and 2. plus

3.) x is not bald

so "the present king of France is not bald", entailing, as it does, assertion 1. ("there is a king of France") is also false.

The law of the excluded middle is not violated because by denying both of these, we are not asserting the existence of some x which is neither bald nor not bald.



If only Misplaced Pages had a professional philosopher as editor in chief, we could get a full explanation of these mysteries.

Latest revision as of 14:07, 17 November 2019

Redirect to:

This page is a redirect. The following categories are used to track and monitor this redirect: When appropriate, protection levels are automatically sensed, described and categorized.